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Identifying the motives for and against drinking during pregnancy and motherhood, and factors associated with increased maternal alcohol use

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Identifying the motives for and against drinking during pregnancy and motherhood, and factors associated with increased maternal alcohol use. / Fleming, K.M.; Gomez, K.U.; Goodwin, L. et al.
In: Journal of Public Health (Germany), 20.11.2023.

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Fleming KM, Gomez KU, Goodwin L, Rose AK. Identifying the motives for and against drinking during pregnancy and motherhood, and factors associated with increased maternal alcohol use. Journal of Public Health (Germany). 2023 Nov 20. Epub 2023 Nov 20. doi: 10.1007/s10389-023-02141-7

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@article{4a1decc107cf49fa9cc250905dfbe664,
title = "Identifying the motives for and against drinking during pregnancy and motherhood, and factors associated with increased maternal alcohol use",
abstract = "AimMaternal drinking (alcohol use during pregnancy/motherhood) is a hidden public health concern which can have significant negative effects on the woman and child. This pilot survey explored several domains that might influence maternal drinking.Subject and methodsTwo cross-sectional, online surveys recruited (1) women who were pregnant and (2) mothers who were not pregnant. Surveys captured data on alcohol use and harmful drinking, attitudes on and motives for drinking/not drinking, and perceived barriers to drinking less. Content analysis of free text responses complemented quantitative data.ResultsIn this convenience sample of 836 pregnant women and 589 mothers, 91% of pregnant women and 28% of mothers reported abstinence. Of those reporting alcohol use, median consumption was 2.3 units/week in pregnant women, and 6.9 units/week in non-pregnant mothers. Of mothers currently drinking, 25.1% reported hazardous or harmful levels. Heavier drinking was associated with numerous motives, including using alcohol as a coping strategy. Child welfare was a key motivating factor for not drinking, as were practical issues of motherhood. The stresses of motherhood were a perceived barrier to reducing drinking, and mothers reported more barriers than pregnant women.ConclusionStress reduction motives may be a risk factor for heavier maternal drinking, while motives for not drinking seem to be focused on child welfare and maternal well-being. Stress and a lack of knowledge about how to reduce drinking appear to be barriers for mothers to change their drinking behaviour. These findings can inform the development of effective public health interventions to reduce maternal drinking.",
author = "K.M. Fleming and K.U. Gomez and L. Goodwin and A.K. Rose",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1007/s10389-023-02141-7",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Public Health (Germany)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Identifying the motives for and against drinking during pregnancy and motherhood, and factors associated with increased maternal alcohol use

AU - Fleming, K.M.

AU - Gomez, K.U.

AU - Goodwin, L.

AU - Rose, A.K.

PY - 2023/11/20

Y1 - 2023/11/20

N2 - AimMaternal drinking (alcohol use during pregnancy/motherhood) is a hidden public health concern which can have significant negative effects on the woman and child. This pilot survey explored several domains that might influence maternal drinking.Subject and methodsTwo cross-sectional, online surveys recruited (1) women who were pregnant and (2) mothers who were not pregnant. Surveys captured data on alcohol use and harmful drinking, attitudes on and motives for drinking/not drinking, and perceived barriers to drinking less. Content analysis of free text responses complemented quantitative data.ResultsIn this convenience sample of 836 pregnant women and 589 mothers, 91% of pregnant women and 28% of mothers reported abstinence. Of those reporting alcohol use, median consumption was 2.3 units/week in pregnant women, and 6.9 units/week in non-pregnant mothers. Of mothers currently drinking, 25.1% reported hazardous or harmful levels. Heavier drinking was associated with numerous motives, including using alcohol as a coping strategy. Child welfare was a key motivating factor for not drinking, as were practical issues of motherhood. The stresses of motherhood were a perceived barrier to reducing drinking, and mothers reported more barriers than pregnant women.ConclusionStress reduction motives may be a risk factor for heavier maternal drinking, while motives for not drinking seem to be focused on child welfare and maternal well-being. Stress and a lack of knowledge about how to reduce drinking appear to be barriers for mothers to change their drinking behaviour. These findings can inform the development of effective public health interventions to reduce maternal drinking.

AB - AimMaternal drinking (alcohol use during pregnancy/motherhood) is a hidden public health concern which can have significant negative effects on the woman and child. This pilot survey explored several domains that might influence maternal drinking.Subject and methodsTwo cross-sectional, online surveys recruited (1) women who were pregnant and (2) mothers who were not pregnant. Surveys captured data on alcohol use and harmful drinking, attitudes on and motives for drinking/not drinking, and perceived barriers to drinking less. Content analysis of free text responses complemented quantitative data.ResultsIn this convenience sample of 836 pregnant women and 589 mothers, 91% of pregnant women and 28% of mothers reported abstinence. Of those reporting alcohol use, median consumption was 2.3 units/week in pregnant women, and 6.9 units/week in non-pregnant mothers. Of mothers currently drinking, 25.1% reported hazardous or harmful levels. Heavier drinking was associated with numerous motives, including using alcohol as a coping strategy. Child welfare was a key motivating factor for not drinking, as were practical issues of motherhood. The stresses of motherhood were a perceived barrier to reducing drinking, and mothers reported more barriers than pregnant women.ConclusionStress reduction motives may be a risk factor for heavier maternal drinking, while motives for not drinking seem to be focused on child welfare and maternal well-being. Stress and a lack of knowledge about how to reduce drinking appear to be barriers for mothers to change their drinking behaviour. These findings can inform the development of effective public health interventions to reduce maternal drinking.

U2 - 10.1007/s10389-023-02141-7

DO - 10.1007/s10389-023-02141-7

M3 - Journal article

JO - Journal of Public Health (Germany)

JF - Journal of Public Health (Germany)

ER -