Kost K, Landry D J, Darroch J E
Alan Guttmacher Institute, New York, USA.
Fam Plann Perspect. 1998 Mar-Apr;30(2):79-88.
Women's behavior during pregnancy, which can affect the health of their infant, may be influenced by their attitude toward the pregnancy.
Multivariate analyses of data from the 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey and the 1988 National Survey of Family Growth were conducted to investigate whether women with unplanned births differ from other women in their pregnancy behavior, independent of their social and demographic characteristics.
Women with intended conceptions are more likely than similar women with unintended pregnancies to recognize early signs of pregnancy and to seek out early prenatal care, and somewhat more likely to quit smoking, but they are not more likely than women with comparable social and demographic characteristics to adhere to a recommended schedule of prenatal visits once they begin care, to reduce alcohol intake, or to follow their clinician's advice about taking vitamins and gaining weight. Social and demographic differences in these behaviors are largely unaffected by planning status, indicating that these differences are independently related to pregnancy behaviors.
Both the intendedness of a pregnancy and the mother's social and demographic characteristics are important predictors of pregnancy-related behavior.
孕期女性的行为会影响其婴儿的健康,而这种行为可能受其对怀孕的态度影响。
对1988年全国母婴健康调查和1988年全国家庭生育调查的数据进行多变量分析,以调查意外生育的女性与其他女性在怀孕行为上是否存在差异,且不受其社会和人口特征的影响。
有计划怀孕的女性比类似的意外怀孕女性更有可能识别出怀孕的早期迹象并寻求早期产前护理,也更有可能戒烟,但与具有相似社会和人口特征的女性相比,她们在开始接受护理后并不更有可能遵循推荐的产前检查时间表、减少酒精摄入量或听从临床医生关于服用维生素和控制体重的建议。这些行为中的社会和人口差异在很大程度上不受生育计划状态的影响,这表明这些差异与怀孕行为独立相关。
怀孕的计划性以及母亲的社会和人口特征都是与怀孕相关行为的重要预测因素。