Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
School of Medicine and Public Health, The University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia; Hunter Medical Research Institute, New South Wales, Australia.
Midwifery. 2024 Dec;139:104163. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2024.104163. Epub 2024 Aug 31.
Providing smoking cessation care has not successfully prevented women who quit smoking during pregnancy from relapsing due to multi-level barriers.
This paper explores systemic barriers to providing smoking cessation care, focusing on relapse prevention among pregnant and postpartum Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women (hereafter Aboriginal).
Twenty-six interviews were conducted between October 2020 and July 2021 with health professionals, health promotion workers and managers working in Aboriginal smoking cessation across six Australian states and territories. Data were thematically analysed.
Themes emerging from the data included: (a) limited time, competing priorities and shortage of health professionals; (b) a need for more knowledge and skills for health professionals; (c) influences of funding allocations and models of smoking cessation care; (d) lack of relevance of anti-tobacco messages to pregnancy and postpartum relapse; and (e) ways forward. Several barriers emerged from policies influencing access to resources and approaches to smoking cessation care for Aboriginal women. Individual-level maternal smoking cessation care provision was often under-resourced and time-constrained to adequately meet Aboriginal women's needs. Identified needs for health professionals included more time, knowledge and skills, better cultural awareness for non-Indigenous health professionals, and salient anti-tobacco messages for pregnant women related to long-term cessation.
To drive smoking cessation in pregnant and postpartum Aboriginal women, we recommend adequately reimbursing midwives and Aboriginal Health Workers/Professionals to allow them to provide intensive support, build confidence in Quitline, continue health professionals' capacity-building and allocate consistent funding to initiatives that have been efficacious with Aboriginal women.
由于多层次的障碍,为戒烟的孕妇提供戒烟护理并没有成功防止她们复吸。
本文探讨了提供戒烟护理的系统性障碍,重点关注防止怀孕和产后的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民妇女(以下简称原住民)复吸。
2020 年 10 月至 2021 年 7 月,与澳大利亚六个州和地区从事原住民戒烟工作的卫生专业人员、健康促进工作者和管理人员进行了 26 次访谈。对数据进行了主题分析。
数据中出现的主题包括:(a)时间有限、优先事项竞争和卫生专业人员短缺;(b)卫生专业人员需要更多的知识和技能;(c)资金分配和戒烟护理模式的影响;(d)与怀孕和产后复吸相关的反烟草信息缺乏相关性;(e)前进的方向。影响获取资源和为原住民妇女提供戒烟护理方法的政策引发了一些障碍。个人层面的产妇戒烟护理提供往往资源不足且时间受限,无法充分满足原住民妇女的需求。卫生专业人员确定的需求包括更多的时间、知识和技能、提高非土著卫生专业人员的文化意识,以及针对与长期戒烟相关的孕妇的相关反烟草信息。
为了推动原住民孕妇和产后妇女戒烟,我们建议充分补偿助产士和原住民卫生工作者/专业人员,以便他们能够提供密集的支持,增强对戒烟热线的信心,继续为卫生专业人员提供能力建设,并为对原住民妇女有效的举措分配一致的资金。