Health related quality of life across the perinatal period among Australian women

Emmanuel, Elizabeth N., and Sun, Jing (2014) Health related quality of life across the perinatal period among Australian women. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 23 (11-12). pp. 1611-1619.

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Abstract

Aims and objectives: To investigate the significant features in health-related quality of life and to examine the changes over time during the perinatal period.

Background: Health-related quality of life during the perinatal period is significant for women. Screening or surveillance during the perinatal period is inconsistent and often not part of continued assessment.

Design: Prospective.

Methods: Setting involved antenatal clinics at three public hospitals in metropolitan Brisbane, Australia. A total of 363 participants out of a cohort of 605 women completed all items of the Short Form-12 Health Survey in late pregnancy and again at 6 and 12 weeks postpartum.

Results: There was a significant difference across the three perinatal time periods in all the health-related quality-of-life subscales. Significant improvements were noted from late pregnancy to 6 weeks following childbirth and again at 12 weeks particularly in physical health, role physical, bodily pain, vitality, role emotional and mental health. Even when confounding variables such as maternal ages, partner status, parity, delivery type and ethnicity were introduced, significant improvements were noted. Maternal distress significantly related to almost all quality-of-life factors over time even when all possible confounding factors were controlled.

Conclusion: Significant changes occur in health-related quality of life across the perinatal period. All dimensions of health-related quality of life except for social functioning and maternal distress showed marked improvement following childbirth. During this period, maternal distress was negatively related to health-related quality of life.

Relevance to clinical practice: Nurses need to be mindful of the broader view of health as encompassed in health-related quality-of-life measures and the potential these have for alerting health professionals when providing care. More rigorous health assessment for mothers at risk is useful so that appropriate support and follow-up can be given.

Item ID: 26844
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1365-2702
Keywords: care; clinical; maternal distress; nurses; postpartum; pregnancy; quality of life
Date Deposited: 22 Jul 2013 01:17
FoR Codes: 11 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES > 1110 Nursing > 111006 Midwifery @ 50%
11 MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES > 1110 Nursing > 111099 Nursing not elsewhere classified @ 50%
SEO Codes: 92 HEALTH > 9299 Other Health > 929999 Health not elsewhere classified @ 100%
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