School of Public Health, 1415 Washington Heights, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 48109.
University of Michigan, 500 S. State Street, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 48109.
Midwifery. 2021 Jul;98:102991. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2021.102991. Epub 2021 Mar 16.
To explore if and how women perceived their prenatal care to have changed as a result of COVID-19 and the impact of those changes on pregnant women.
Qualitative analysis of open-ended prompts included as part of an anonymous, online, cross-sectional survey of pregnant women in the United States.
Online survey with participants from 47 states within the U.S.
Self-identified pregnant women recruited through Facebook, Twitter, and other online sources.
An anonymous, online survey of pregnant women (distributed April 3 - 24, 2020) included an open-ended prompt asking women to tell us how COVID-19 had affected their prenatal care. Open-ended narrative responses were downloaded into Excel and coded using the Attride-Sterling Framework. 2519 pregnant women from 47 states responded to the survey, 88.4% of whom had at least one previous birth. Mean age was 32.7 years, mean weeks pregnant was 24.3 weeks, and mean number of prenatal visits at the point of the survey was 6.5. Predominant themes of the open narratives included COVID-19's role in creating structural changes within the healthcare system (reported spontaneously by 2075 respondents), behavioral changes among both pregnant women and their providers (reported by 429 respondents), and emotional consequences for women who were pregnant (reported by 503 respondents) during the pandemic. Changes resulting from COVID-19 varied widely by provider, and women's perceptions of the impact on quality of care ranged from perceiving care as extremely compromised to perceiving it to be improved as a result of the pandemic.
Women who are pregnant during the COVID-19 pandemic have faced enormous upheaval as hospitals and healthcare providers have struggled to meet the simultaneous and often competing demands of infection prevention, pandemic preparedness, high patient volumes of extremely sick patients, and the needs of 'non-urgent' pregnant patients. In some settings, women described very few changes, whereas others reported radical changes implemented seemingly overnight. While infection rates may drive variable responses, these inconsistencies raise important questions regarding the need for local, state, national, or even global recommendations for the care of pregnant women during a global pandemic such as COVID-19.
探讨女性是否以及如何感知她们的产前护理因 COVID-19 而发生变化,以及这些变化对孕妇的影响。
对美国一项针对孕妇的匿名在线横断面调查中包含的开放式提示进行定性分析。
在线调查,参与者来自美国 47 个州。
通过 Facebook、Twitter 和其他在线资源招募的自我认同孕妇。
2020 年 4 月 3 日至 24 日,对孕妇进行了匿名在线调查,其中包括一个开放式提示,要求女性告诉我们 COVID-19 如何影响她们的产前护理。开放式叙述性回复被下载到 Excel 中,并使用 Attride-Sterling 框架进行编码。来自美国 47 个州的 2519 名孕妇对调查做出了回应,其中 88.4%的人至少有过一次生育。平均年龄为 32.7 岁,平均怀孕周数为 24.3 周,在调查时的平均产前就诊次数为 6.5 次。开放式叙述的主要主题包括 COVID-19 在医疗保健系统中造成的结构性变化(2075 名受访者自发报告)、孕妇及其提供者的行为变化(429 名受访者报告),以及大流行期间孕妇的情绪后果(503 名受访者报告)。由于 COVID-19 而导致的变化因提供者而异,女性对其对护理质量影响的看法从认为护理严重受损到认为由于大流行而得到改善不等。
在 COVID-19 大流行期间怀孕的女性面临着巨大的动荡,因为医院和医疗保健提供者努力满足感染预防、大流行准备、大量极其生病的患者以及“非紧急”孕妇需求的同时和相互竞争的需求。在某些情况下,女性描述的变化很少,而其他女性则报告实施了一夜之间的激进变化。虽然感染率可能会导致不同的反应,但这些不一致性引发了有关在 COVID-19 等全球大流行期间为孕妇提供护理的地方、州、国家甚至全球建议的重要问题。