Cargando…

How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol

INTRODUCTION: Pregnant people have a higher risk of severe COVID-19 disease. They have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 infection control policies, which exacerbated conditions resulting in intimate partner violence, healthcare access, and mental health distress. This project examines th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vanstone, Meredith, Correia, Rebecca H., Howard, Michelle, Darling, Elizabeth, Bayrampour, Hamideh, Carruthers, Andrea, Davis, Amie, Hadid, Dima, Hetherington, Erin, Jones, Aaron, Kandasamy, Sujane, Kuyvenhoven, Cassandra, Liauw, Jessica, McDonald, Sarah D., Mniszak, Caroline, Molinaro, Monica L., Pahwa, Manisha, Patel, Tejal, Sadik, Marina, Sanya, Njideka, Shen, Katrina, Greyson, Devon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10414672/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37561748
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288952
_version_ 1785087392533708800
author Vanstone, Meredith
Correia, Rebecca H.
Howard, Michelle
Darling, Elizabeth
Bayrampour, Hamideh
Carruthers, Andrea
Davis, Amie
Hadid, Dima
Hetherington, Erin
Jones, Aaron
Kandasamy, Sujane
Kuyvenhoven, Cassandra
Liauw, Jessica
McDonald, Sarah D.
Mniszak, Caroline
Molinaro, Monica L.
Pahwa, Manisha
Patel, Tejal
Sadik, Marina
Sanya, Njideka
Shen, Katrina
Greyson, Devon
author_facet Vanstone, Meredith
Correia, Rebecca H.
Howard, Michelle
Darling, Elizabeth
Bayrampour, Hamideh
Carruthers, Andrea
Davis, Amie
Hadid, Dima
Hetherington, Erin
Jones, Aaron
Kandasamy, Sujane
Kuyvenhoven, Cassandra
Liauw, Jessica
McDonald, Sarah D.
Mniszak, Caroline
Molinaro, Monica L.
Pahwa, Manisha
Patel, Tejal
Sadik, Marina
Sanya, Njideka
Shen, Katrina
Greyson, Devon
author_sort Vanstone, Meredith
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Pregnant people have a higher risk of severe COVID-19 disease. They have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 infection control policies, which exacerbated conditions resulting in intimate partner violence, healthcare access, and mental health distress. This project examines the impact of accumulated individual health decisions and describes how perinatal care and health outcomes changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. OBJECTIVES: 1. Quantitative strand: Describe differences between 2019, 2021, and 2022 birth groups related to maternal vaccination, perinatal care, and mental health care. Examine the differential impacts on racialized and low-income pregnant people. 2. Qualitative strand: Understand how pregnant people’s perceptions of COVID-19 risk influenced their decision-making about vaccination, perinatal care, social support, and mental health. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a Canadian convergent parallel mixed-methods study. The quantitative strand uses a retrospective cohort design to assess birth group differences in rates of Tdap and COVID-19 vaccination, gestational diabetes screening, length of post-partum hospital stay, and onset of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder, using administrative data from ICES, formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (Ontario) and PopulationData BC (PopData) (British Columbia). Differences by socioeconomic and ethnocultural status will also be examined. The qualitative strand employs qualitative description to interview people who gave birth between May 2020- December 2021 about their COVID-19 risk perception and health decision-making process. Data integration will occur during design and interpretation. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study received ethical approval from McMaster University and the University of British Columbia. Findings will be disseminated via manuscripts, presentations, and patient-facing infographics. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov registration number: NCT05663762.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10414672
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104146722023-08-11 How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol Vanstone, Meredith Correia, Rebecca H. Howard, Michelle Darling, Elizabeth Bayrampour, Hamideh Carruthers, Andrea Davis, Amie Hadid, Dima Hetherington, Erin Jones, Aaron Kandasamy, Sujane Kuyvenhoven, Cassandra Liauw, Jessica McDonald, Sarah D. Mniszak, Caroline Molinaro, Monica L. Pahwa, Manisha Patel, Tejal Sadik, Marina Sanya, Njideka Shen, Katrina Greyson, Devon PLoS One Study Protocol INTRODUCTION: Pregnant people have a higher risk of severe COVID-19 disease. They have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 infection control policies, which exacerbated conditions resulting in intimate partner violence, healthcare access, and mental health distress. This project examines the impact of accumulated individual health decisions and describes how perinatal care and health outcomes changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. OBJECTIVES: 1. Quantitative strand: Describe differences between 2019, 2021, and 2022 birth groups related to maternal vaccination, perinatal care, and mental health care. Examine the differential impacts on racialized and low-income pregnant people. 2. Qualitative strand: Understand how pregnant people’s perceptions of COVID-19 risk influenced their decision-making about vaccination, perinatal care, social support, and mental health. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a Canadian convergent parallel mixed-methods study. The quantitative strand uses a retrospective cohort design to assess birth group differences in rates of Tdap and COVID-19 vaccination, gestational diabetes screening, length of post-partum hospital stay, and onset of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder, using administrative data from ICES, formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (Ontario) and PopulationData BC (PopData) (British Columbia). Differences by socioeconomic and ethnocultural status will also be examined. The qualitative strand employs qualitative description to interview people who gave birth between May 2020- December 2021 about their COVID-19 risk perception and health decision-making process. Data integration will occur during design and interpretation. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study received ethical approval from McMaster University and the University of British Columbia. Findings will be disseminated via manuscripts, presentations, and patient-facing infographics. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov registration number: NCT05663762. Public Library of Science 2023-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10414672/ /pubmed/37561748 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288952 Text en © 2023 Vanstone et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Vanstone, Meredith
Correia, Rebecca H.
Howard, Michelle
Darling, Elizabeth
Bayrampour, Hamideh
Carruthers, Andrea
Davis, Amie
Hadid, Dima
Hetherington, Erin
Jones, Aaron
Kandasamy, Sujane
Kuyvenhoven, Cassandra
Liauw, Jessica
McDonald, Sarah D.
Mniszak, Caroline
Molinaro, Monica L.
Pahwa, Manisha
Patel, Tejal
Sadik, Marina
Sanya, Njideka
Shen, Katrina
Greyson, Devon
How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title_full How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title_fullStr How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title_full_unstemmed How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title_short How do perceptions of Covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? A convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
title_sort how do perceptions of covid-19 risk impact pregnancy-related health decisions? a convergent parallel mixed-methods study protocol
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10414672/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37561748
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288952
work_keys_str_mv AT vanstonemeredith howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT correiarebeccah howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT howardmichelle howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT darlingelizabeth howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT bayrampourhamideh howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT carruthersandrea howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT davisamie howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT hadiddima howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT hetheringtonerin howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT jonesaaron howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT kandasamysujane howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT kuyvenhovencassandra howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT liauwjessica howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT mcdonaldsarahd howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT mniszakcaroline howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT molinaromonical howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT pahwamanisha howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT pateltejal howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT sadikmarina howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT sanyanjideka howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT shenkatrina howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol
AT greysondevon howdoperceptionsofcovid19riskimpactpregnancyrelatedhealthdecisionsaconvergentparallelmixedmethodsstudyprotocol