• Br J Gen Pract · Apr 2018

    Behaviour change opportunities at mother and baby checks in primary care: a qualitative investigation of the experiences of GPs.

    • Hannah Talbot, Emily Strong, Sarah Peters, and Debbie M Smith.
    • The School of Health Sciences, The University of Manchester, Manchester.
    • Br J Gen Pract. 2018 Apr 1; 68 (669): e252e259e252-e259.

    BackgroundPregnancy is widely recognised as a 'teachable moment' for healthy behaviour change and the postnatal period has been identified as the opportune time to initiate this change. In the UK, all women are offered a routine health check at 6-8 weeks postpartum with their GP. This provides a potential opportunity to facilitate long-term behaviour change discussions.AimTo explore GPs' views and experiences of using the postnatal check as a health-related behaviour change opportunity.Design And SettingA qualitative, inductive study in general practice.MethodSemi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with 18 GPs. Audiorecorded interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsOne theme emerged from the data: the postnatal check is an unrealised opportunity to facilitate health-related behaviour change. This theme was organised into three subthemes: opportunity for health-related behaviour change; role responsibility; and patient-led versus GP-led behaviour change.ConclusionAlthough GPs recognise the postnatal check as a potential opportunity for health-related behaviour change, it is underutilised as they do not perceive this to be the purpose of the check and are uncertain as to their role in facilitating lifestyle changes. To enable this long-term lifestyle behaviour change opportunity to be utilised more fully, further research is needed to understand women's expectations of the postnatal checks and the scope for further recommendations, guidance, and communication training around behaviour change.© British Journal of General Practice 2018.

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