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Article

Preconception knowledge, beliefs and behaviours among people of reproductive age: A systematic review of qualitative studies

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Citation

Welshman H, Dombrowski S, Grant A, Swanson V, Goudreau A & Currie S (2023) Preconception knowledge, beliefs and behaviours among people of reproductive age: A systematic review of qualitative studies. Preventive Medicine, 175, Art. No.: 107707. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ypmed.2023.107707

Abstract
Background The health of parents before pregnancy influences the short- and long-term health of their offspring. This systematic review explored the preconception knowledge, beliefs and behaviours held by women and men of childbearing age. Methods Databases were searched from 2009 to 2022 (MEDLINE, CINAHL Full-text, PsycINFO, EMBASE). Inclusion criteria specified qualitative research papers which recruited individuals of reproductive age (16–45 years) without existing chronic illnesses. Data were quality assessed and analysed using thematic synthesis. Results Twelve papers met inclusion criteria. Six themes were identified (cultural context, pregnancy planning, knowledge, gender roles and responsibility, information seeking, prior health behaviours) which relate to individual, social, psychological and cultural factors. Cultural context was related to all other themes. Pregnancy planners had greater motivation to optimise their health whereas those not actively planning were focused more on becoming financially stable. Women and men's knowledge of how and why to engage in health protective behaviours was limited, with health risks and behaviour change discussed in the context of pregnancy rather than preconception. Gender roles influenced individual responsibility for preparation for pregnancy, which in turn influenced information seeking behaviours and engagement in health behaviours. Online sources of support and information were seen as desirable, regardless of pregnancy planning stage. Conclusions Our findings indicate that behaviour change interventions designed to support people to optimise health before conception should address cultural, individual, social and psychological factors to facilitate behaviour change. Development of online resources may help to increase accessibility for people across different cultural contexts and stages of pregnancy planning.

Keywords
Preconception; Health behaviours; Knowledge; Beliefs; Systematic review; Qualitative; Pregnancy planning

Journal
Preventive Medicine: Volume 175

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/10/2023
Publication date online18/09/2023
Date accepted by journal15/09/2023
URL
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0091-7435

People (4)

Dr Sinead Currie

Dr Sinead Currie

Senior Lecturer, Psychology

Dr Stephan Dombrowski

Dr Stephan Dombrowski

Honorary Senior Research Fellow, Psychology

Professor Vivien Swanson

Professor Vivien Swanson

Professor, Psychology

Miss Hannah Welshman

Miss Hannah Welshman

PhD Researcher, Psychology

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Research themes