Healthcare practitioners "are uniquely positioned" to advise women
about exercise during pregnancy, the study team writes in the
journal Women and Birth, but it's possible that many doctors don't
bring it up because they are unsure about what to recommend.
Past research links exercise during pregnancy with both long- and
short-term health benefits for women and their babies, the
researchers note.
"Yet, we found pregnant women are not engaging in conversations
about exercise with healthcare providers," Dr. Melanie Hayman, a
physical activity researcher at Central Queensland University in
Rockhampton and lead author of the study, told Reuters Health in an
email.
Hayman said healthcare professionals receive little formal training
in exercise guidelines. In a 2017 survey of 50 Australian
practitioners that she conducted, just two reported having received
formal training in the guidelines. "They lack the confidence to
advise pregnant women," she said.
Exercise guidelines for healthy pregnant women without pregnancy
complications are similar to those for other healthy adults, the
authors note: a total of 150-300 minutes per week of
moderate-to-vigorous physical activity. In addition, two sessions
per week of resistance-based exercise is recommended.
Yet previous studies suggest only 35% of pregnant women in Australia
meet these guidelines.
To assess whether healthcare providers are giving pregnant women
guidance about exercise, Hayman and her colleagues recruited
pregnant women attending appointments at any of 11 clinics, or
public and private hospitals within Central Queensland's Rockhampton
region to fill out a survey.
Of the 142 women who completed and returned the survey, 49% said
they had received exercise information from their doctors, and 56%
of these women said they had to initiate the conversation.
Less than one third of the participants said they were counseled
about how many times a week to exercise. And only two women got
advice that matched the guidelines, having been told to "participate
in exercise on most, if not all days of the week."
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About one in eight women said their doctors told them to do physical
activity "as many times as they liked" - a recommendation the study
authors called "vague and unclear."
None of the women were advised to do resistance-based exercise and
six of them said they were specifically advised against it.
These results highlight misconceptions still associated with
exercising during pregnancy, the study authors write.
Hayman's team also surveyed practitioners at the sites where they
recruited pregnant women. The providers said they were willing to
give exercise recommendations if they had the opportunity to learn
about what exercises to recommend.
"We must support our medical professionals if we want them to engage
in such conversations," Hayman said.
Among the study's limitations is that the authors had to rely on
participants' reports about what providers had told them. "There
always is a chance for the findings to be affected by perception,"
Hayman noted.
The study also doesn't say whether any of the women had some health
problem that restricted exercise. The participants were also
primarily young (ages 25-35), married and employed, so they may not
represent a broader population of pregnant women.
Studies in the U.S. and UK have found higher rates of familiarity
with exercise guidelines and willingness to give advice among
doctors and midwives.
"This study highlights that there may be a breakdown in
communication," said Dr. Sara Gould of the University of Alabama at
Birmingham.
"Part of that breakdown may stem from lack of knowledge about
recommendations, as well as lack of sound research to support the
recommendations," noted Gould, who wasn't involved in the current
research. "Therefore, any study that addresses this issue and seeks
to better understand exercise during pregnancy, is very important
from a clinical perspective."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2kJYC9c
Women Birth 2019.
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