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Personal experiences of women with diabetes who do not attend pre-pregnancy care

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-17, 01:59 authored by HR Murphy, RC Temple, VE Ball, JM Roland, S Steel, R Zill-E-Huma, D Simmons, LR Royce, TC Skinner
Diabet. Med. 27, 92–100 (2010)AbstractAims  To explore the views of women who did not attend pre‐pregnancy care (PPC), in particular their accounts of contraception, previous pregnancies and the influence of healthcare advice.Methods  We conducted semi‐structured interviews with 29 pregnant women (21 with Type 1 diabetes, eight with Type 2 diabetes) at three UK specialist diabetes antenatal clinics. Interviews explored women’s journeys to becoming pregnant, including use of contraception, their views regarding diabetes and pregnancy and the factors which encouraged and discouraged them from attending PPC.Results  All women had some understanding of the issues concerning diabetes during pregnancy, predominantly regarding the benefits of PPC (90%) and optimal glycaemic control (80%) and risks of malformation (48%) and macrosomia (35%). Most were not regularly using contraception (70%), having stopped deliberately (45%), become unintentionally less rigorous (28%) or experienced side effects/contraindications (14%). Knowledge concerning the risks of pregnancy (90%) and past pre‐conception counselling (38%) did not encourage women to attend PPC, and neither did personal experience of miscarriage, malformation or stillbirth in women with previous poor pregnancy outcome (41%). Barriers included conceiving faster than anticipated (45%), fertility concerns (31%), negative experiences with health professionals (21%), desire for a ‘normal’ pregnancy (17%) and the logistics of attending (10%).Conclusions  More integrated diabetes and reproductive health/contraceptive advice, increased awareness of the potentially short time between stopping contraception and conception and more intensive support between pregnancies are required, particularly for women with previously poor outcomes. Research is also needed into how communication between health professionals and women with diabetes can be improved.

History

Journal

Diabetic Medicine

Volume

27

Pagination

92-100

Location

England

ISSN

0742-3071

eISSN

1464-5491

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC