'I was a full time proper smoker': A qualitative exploration of smoking in the home after childbirth among women who relapse postpartum
Autor: | Sue Cooper, Tim Coleman, Sophie Orton, Sarah Lewis, Laura Jones |
---|---|
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_treatment Maternal Health Psychological intervention lcsh:Medicine Smoking Prevention Smoking Pregnancy Relapse Postpartum Habits Families 0302 clinical medicine Pregnancy Recurrence Smoking Habits Medicine and Health Sciences Medicine Childbirth 030212 general & internal medicine lcsh:Science Children Qualitative Research Family Characteristics Multidisciplinary Postpartum Period Smoking Obstetrics and Gynecology Tobacco Use Disorder Female 0305 other medical science Infants Research Article Adult medicine.medical_specialty Full-time Parenting Behavior Directive Counseling Mothers complex mixtures 03 medical and health sciences Intervention (counseling) Humans Psychiatry Motivation Behavior 030505 public health business.industry lcsh:R Parturition Infant Biology and Life Sciences medicine.disease Delivery Obstetric Age Groups People and Places Birth Smoking cessation Women's Health lcsh:Q Smoking Cessation Tobacco Smoke Pollution Population Groupings business Postpartum period Qualitative research |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE PLoS ONE, Vol 11, Iss 6, p e0157525 (2016) |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | Background: \ud Many women stop smoking during pregnancy but relapse shortly afterwards, potentially putting their infants at risk of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure. Women who were able to stop during pregnancy may be a motivated group, receptive to making behaviour changes postpartum to protect their infant from SHS exposure. Understanding more about their experiences of relapse, and if this influences home smoking behaviours and children’s exposure to SHS in the home may help to inform intervention development to prevent infant SHS exposure.\ud \ud Methods: \ud Guided by interpretative phenomenological methodology we conducted and analysed nine semi-structured interviews with women who quit smoking during pregnancy, but relapsed ≤3 months postpartum.\ud \ud Findings:\ud Central to mothers’ accounts of their smoking behaviours during pregnancy and postpartum was their desire to be a ‘responsible mother’. Mothers described using strategies to protect their infant from SHS exposure, and held strong negative attitudes towards other smoking parents. After relapsing, mothers appeared to reposition themselves as ‘social’ or ‘occasional’ smokers rather than ‘regular’ smokers\ud \ud Conclusions:\ud Findings suggest that interventions to prevent/reduce infants' home SHS exposure should build on mothers' intentions to be responsible parents. As mothers who relapse principally view themselves as ‘social’ or ‘occasional’ smokers, interventions that are highlighted as relevant for women with these types of smoking patterns may be more likely to be responded to, and, ultimately, be effective. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |
Pro tento záznam nejsou dostupné žádné jednotky.