Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Promoting Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Pregnant Migrant Women and the Potential of a Digital Support Tool—A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Informants and Recruitment
2.3. Ethics
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Increasing Health Behavior Awareness
“I am very unsure if they are aware of… I think, for example, the National Food Administration has certain recommendations for pregnant women. I do not know if they are aware of them. If they have information about them and if they think they are relevant.”(Midwife, delivery ward, interview 10)
“I can imagine that those who come from a country and have not come here voluntarily, may have come here as a refugee or have had to flee from their country, they do not really focus on things like this [lifestyle habits] that I think that they sometimes experience as a bit trivial. They have many other major issues in their lives that they need to solve. Maybe ‘can I stay at all?’, ‘Can my children come here?’, ‘Can my husband come here?’”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 12)
“I think you often can see that they do not care as much about how much weight they gain during a pregnancy and you can often see that the weight increases quite quickly and do not absorb the same information about healthy weight gain and healthy lifestyle habits. I think you can see a big difference there.”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 6)
3.2. Considering Social Environment in Health Promotion
“That you [migrant women] value experiences from previous generations higher than we do. […] It is important to convince the partner but also the women in the surrounding environment such as sisters, mothers, mother-in-law, that in some cases can play an important role. Possibly that we [healthcare professionals] should broaden our views there as well and also aim to direct the information to the women in the surrounding environment.”(Midwife, delivery ward, interview 10)
“You [the women] sleep poorly, you eat poorly, you move too little, you have pretty much none, or almost no, hour of the day where you are alone. Without having to be present and available with your womb, with your body, with your household chores, with your breasts for the children.”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 9)
“But if the woman understands, it is still the woman who fixes the food at home… If the woman herself understands, it is a gain for the whole family, in fact. Both children and husband.”(Physician, endocrinological clinic, interview 8)
3.3. Resources for Health Promotional Work
”To rest on the experience, how it [cultural foods] usually is. And maybe go into details a little. […] So you need to have dug a lot more into the food culture to know what everything means here.”(Dietician, endocrinological clinic, interview 3)
“And then, there is very low trust in us. They do not trust us. And then they have a very hard time following our recommendations. […] Their trust in us is not very strong, so if we recommend medical treatment, it takes time until they understand or accept, so those are challenges.”(Physician, endocrinological clinic, interview 5)
”As I said before, this that you often feel like you could put more energy into these topics [health behaviors] if we had the time, which we do not have room for.”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 13)
“It can be difficult to reach through to them [the women] in a good way when using an interpreter. […] Difficult to get through with tools or tips that suit them and their culture or lifestyle. It may be difficult to motivate them.”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 6)
3.4. Using the HealthyMoms Application in Clinical Work
“Yes, I think that our job automatically becomes easier when the woman has a higher level of knowledge and maybe a bit more compliance to good diet and exercise habits through this [the app]. It will feel easier for us to communicate about this. And hopefully that it then leads to that if we are really lucky, or what you say, and it works then the pregnant woman should gain less [weight], have lower risk of gestational diabetes and then that means less work for us, yes, like that. If one is to think about all the benefits.”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 2)
“I still think we need to keep it [the health promotion work] a bit in the profession and bring in effective aids. But it cannot be replaced with just an IT solution, you must have both. I feel that. So I feel that there is a risk that it will only be digitized. I think that’s a shame. You must have aids, but still need the skills of midwives and be able to talk about these things. I think that is important from a public health perspective.”(Physician, maternity care, interview 14)
“But the starting point must be in their own context. What are their lifestyles? What knowledge have they gained from growing up? How should we think now? What was good, what was not good?”(Midwife, maternity care, interview 12)
4. Discussion
4.1. Main Findings
4.2. Comparison with Previous Work
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
4.4. Implications and Clinical Relevance
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Söderström, E.; Müssener, U.; Löfgren, M.; Sandell, L.; Thomas, K.; Löf, M. Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Promoting Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Pregnant Migrant Women and the Potential of a Digital Support Tool—A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042328
Söderström E, Müssener U, Löfgren M, Sandell L, Thomas K, Löf M. Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Promoting Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Pregnant Migrant Women and the Potential of a Digital Support Tool—A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(4):2328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042328
Chicago/Turabian StyleSöderström, Emmie, Ulrika Müssener, Mikaela Löfgren, Linnea Sandell, Kristin Thomas, and Marie Löf. 2022. "Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Promoting Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Pregnant Migrant Women and the Potential of a Digital Support Tool—A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 4: 2328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042328
APA StyleSöderström, E., Müssener, U., Löfgren, M., Sandell, L., Thomas, K., & Löf, M. (2022). Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Promoting Healthy Lifestyle Behaviors in Pregnant Migrant Women and the Potential of a Digital Support Tool—A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(4), 2328. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042328