Cargando…

Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth

BACKGROUND: Becoming a father impacts men’s health and wellbeing, while also contributing to the health and wellbeing of mothers and children. There is no large-scale, public health surveillance system aimed at understanding the health and behaviors of men transitioning into fatherhood. The purpose...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Garfield, Craig F., Simon, Clarissa D., Stephens, Fay, Castro Román, Patricia, Bryan, Michael, Smith, Ruben A., Kortsmit, Katherine, Salvesen von Essen, Beatriz, Williams, Letitia, Kapaya, Martha, Dieke, Ada, Barfield, Wanda, Warner, Lee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8782358/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35061783
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262366
_version_ 1784638296779915264
author Garfield, Craig F.
Simon, Clarissa D.
Stephens, Fay
Castro Román, Patricia
Bryan, Michael
Smith, Ruben A.
Kortsmit, Katherine
Salvesen von Essen, Beatriz
Williams, Letitia
Kapaya, Martha
Dieke, Ada
Barfield, Wanda
Warner, Lee
author_facet Garfield, Craig F.
Simon, Clarissa D.
Stephens, Fay
Castro Román, Patricia
Bryan, Michael
Smith, Ruben A.
Kortsmit, Katherine
Salvesen von Essen, Beatriz
Williams, Letitia
Kapaya, Martha
Dieke, Ada
Barfield, Wanda
Warner, Lee
author_sort Garfield, Craig F.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Becoming a father impacts men’s health and wellbeing, while also contributing to the health and wellbeing of mothers and children. There is no large-scale, public health surveillance system aimed at understanding the health and behaviors of men transitioning into fatherhood. The purpose of this study was to describe piloted randomized approaches of a state-based surveillance system examining paternal behaviors before and after their infant’s birth to better understand the health needs of men and their families during the transition to parenthood. METHODS: During October 2018–July 2019, 857 fathers in Georgia were sampled 2–6 months after their infant’s birth from birth certificates files and surveyed via mail, online or telephone, in English or Spanish, using two randomized approaches: Indirect-to-Dads and Direct-to-Dads. Survey topics included mental and physical health, healthcare, substance use, and contraceptive use. FINDINGS: Weighted response rates (Indirect-to-Dads, 33%; Direct-to-Dads, 31%) and population demographics did not differ by approach. Respondents completed the survey by mail (58%), online (28%) or telephone (14%). Among 266 fathers completing the survey, 55% had a primary care physician, and 49% attended a healthcare visit for themselves during their infant’s mother’s pregnancy or since their infant’s birth. Most fathers were overweight or had obesity (70%) while fewer reported smoking cigarettes (19%), binge drinking (13%) or depressive symptoms (10%) since their infant’s birth. CONCLUSIONS: This study tests a novel approach for obtaining population-based estimates of fathers’ perinatal health behaviors, with comparable response rates from two pragmatic approaches. The pilot study results quantify a number of public health needs related to fathers’ health and healthcare access.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8782358
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87823582022-01-22 Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth Garfield, Craig F. Simon, Clarissa D. Stephens, Fay Castro Román, Patricia Bryan, Michael Smith, Ruben A. Kortsmit, Katherine Salvesen von Essen, Beatriz Williams, Letitia Kapaya, Martha Dieke, Ada Barfield, Wanda Warner, Lee PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Becoming a father impacts men’s health and wellbeing, while also contributing to the health and wellbeing of mothers and children. There is no large-scale, public health surveillance system aimed at understanding the health and behaviors of men transitioning into fatherhood. The purpose of this study was to describe piloted randomized approaches of a state-based surveillance system examining paternal behaviors before and after their infant’s birth to better understand the health needs of men and their families during the transition to parenthood. METHODS: During October 2018–July 2019, 857 fathers in Georgia were sampled 2–6 months after their infant’s birth from birth certificates files and surveyed via mail, online or telephone, in English or Spanish, using two randomized approaches: Indirect-to-Dads and Direct-to-Dads. Survey topics included mental and physical health, healthcare, substance use, and contraceptive use. FINDINGS: Weighted response rates (Indirect-to-Dads, 33%; Direct-to-Dads, 31%) and population demographics did not differ by approach. Respondents completed the survey by mail (58%), online (28%) or telephone (14%). Among 266 fathers completing the survey, 55% had a primary care physician, and 49% attended a healthcare visit for themselves during their infant’s mother’s pregnancy or since their infant’s birth. Most fathers were overweight or had obesity (70%) while fewer reported smoking cigarettes (19%), binge drinking (13%) or depressive symptoms (10%) since their infant’s birth. CONCLUSIONS: This study tests a novel approach for obtaining population-based estimates of fathers’ perinatal health behaviors, with comparable response rates from two pragmatic approaches. The pilot study results quantify a number of public health needs related to fathers’ health and healthcare access. Public Library of Science 2022-01-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8782358/ /pubmed/35061783 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262366 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garfield, Craig F.
Simon, Clarissa D.
Stephens, Fay
Castro Román, Patricia
Bryan, Michael
Smith, Ruben A.
Kortsmit, Katherine
Salvesen von Essen, Beatriz
Williams, Letitia
Kapaya, Martha
Dieke, Ada
Barfield, Wanda
Warner, Lee
Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title_full Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title_fullStr Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title_full_unstemmed Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title_short Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System for Dads: A piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
title_sort pregnancy risk assessment monitoring system for dads: a piloted randomized trial of public health surveillance of recent fathers’ behaviors before and after infant birth
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8782358/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35061783
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262366
work_keys_str_mv AT garfieldcraigf pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT simonclarissad pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT stephensfay pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT castroromanpatricia pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT bryanmichael pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT smithrubena pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT kortsmitkatherine pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT salvesenvonessenbeatriz pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT williamsletitia pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT kapayamartha pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT diekeada pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT barfieldwanda pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth
AT warnerlee pregnancyriskassessmentmonitoringsystemfordadsapilotedrandomizedtrialofpublichealthsurveillanceofrecentfathersbehaviorsbeforeandafterinfantbirth