Barriers and enablers to addressing smoking, nutrition, alcohol consumption, physical activity and gestational weight gain (SNAP-W) as part of antenatal care: A mixed methods systematic review.

Sophie Dilworth, Emma Doherty, Carly Mallise, Milly Licata, Jenna Hollis, Olivia Wynne, Cassandra Lane, Luke Wolfenden, John Wiggers, Melanie Kingsland
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: International clinical guidelines recommend that smoking, nutrition, alcohol consumption, physical activity and gestational weight gain (SNAP-W) be addressed as part of routine antenatal care throughout pregnancy. However, guideline recommendations are poorly implemented, and few antenatal care recipients routinely receive the recommended care. There is a need to establish the determinants (barriers and enablers) to care delivery to inform strategies to improve implementation. This systematic review aimed to synthesize qualitative and quantitative evidence of the barriers and enablers to the routine delivery of antenatal care targeting SNAP-W health risks.

Methods: A systematic review was conducted following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Seven databases were searched for relevant studies published between January 2001 and November 2023. Study findings were coded and analysed according to the domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF).

Results: Forty-nine studies were included in the review, 27 qualitative studies and 22 quantitative studies. The studies were conducted in 14 countries. Data were collected from 7146 antenatal care providers (midwives, Aboriginal health workers, obstetricians, medical officers, general practitioners) and 352 barriers and enablers were identified. Across all SNAP-W health risk and antenatal care provider groups, the predominant TDF domain was 'environmental context and resources', identified in 96% of studies. Barriers within this domain included insufficient time, limited access to and quality of resources, and limited organisational supports. 'Beliefs about consequences' was the second most common TDF domain, reported in 67% of studies, particularly studies of care related to alcohol use, nutrition/ physical activity/ gestational weight gain and those involving midwives, multidisciplinary practitioners and general practitioners. 'Optimism' was the second most common TDF domain for studies of smoking-related care and involving obstetricians, gynaecologists, and other mixed medical professions.

Conclusions: It is critical that determinants related to environmental context and resources including time, resources and organisational supports are considered in the development of strategies to support the implementation of recommended antenatal care related to SNAP-W risks. Strategies addressing clinician beliefs about consequences and optimism may also be needed to support the implementation of care related to specific health behaviours and by specific antenatal care provider groups.

Registration: The review protocol was prospectively registered with Prospero: CRD42022353084; 22 October 2022.

将吸烟、营养、饮酒、体育锻炼和妊娠体重增加(SNAP-W)作为产前保健的一部分来解决的障碍和促进因素:混合方法系统综述。
背景:国际临床指南建议将吸烟、营养、饮酒、体力活动和妊娠体重增加(SNAP-W)作为整个孕期常规产前保健的一部分。然而,指南建议的执行情况并不理想,很少有产前保健接受者定期接受建议的护理。有必要确定提供护理的决定因素(障碍和促进因素),以便为改善实施情况的策略提供依据。本系统性综述旨在综合定性和定量证据,说明针对 SNAP-W 健康风险常规提供产前护理的障碍和促进因素:方法:根据《系统综述和元分析首选报告项目》指南进行了系统综述。在七个数据库中搜索了 2001 年 1 月至 2023 年 11 月间发表的相关研究。研究结果按照理论领域框架(TDF)的领域进行编码和分析:综述共纳入 49 项研究,其中 27 项为定性研究,22 项为定量研究。这些研究在 14 个国家进行。从 7146 名产前保健提供者(助产士、土著卫生工作者、产科医生、医务人员、全科医生)处收集了数据,并确定了 352 种障碍和促进因素。在所有 SNAP-W 健康风险和产前保健提供者群体中,主要的 TDF 领域是 "环境背景和资源",96% 的研究都确定了这一领域。该领域的障碍包括时间不足、资源获取途径和质量有限以及组织支持有限。对后果的信念 "是第二大最常见的 TDF 领域,有 67% 的研究报告了这一领域,尤其是与饮酒、营养/体育锻炼/妊娠体重增加相关的护理研究,以及涉及助产士、多学科医生和全科医生的研究。在与吸烟相关的护理研究中,"乐观 "是第二大最常见的 TDF 范畴,涉及产科医生、妇科医生和其他混合医学专业:在制定支持实施与 SNAP-W 风险相关的产前保健建议的策略时,必须考虑与环境背景和资源(包括时间、资源和组织支持)相关的决定因素。可能还需要针对临床医生对后果和乐观态度的信念制定策略,以支持特定产前护理提供者群体实施与特定健康行为相关的护理:审查协议已在 Prospero 进行了前瞻性注册:CRD42022353084;2022年10月22日。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.20
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