Counseling patients on preventing prenatal environmental exposures--a mixed-methods study of obstetricians

Describe the attitudes, beliefs, and practices of U.S. obstetricians on the topic of prenatal environmental exposures. A national online survey of American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) fellows and 3 focus groups of obstetricians. We received 2,514 eligible survey responses, for...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-06, Vol.9 (6), p.e98771
Hauptverfasser: Stotland, Naomi E, Sutton, Patrice, Trowbridge, Jessica, Atchley, Dylan S, Conry, Jeanne, Trasande, Leonardo, Gerbert, Barbara, Charlesworth, Annemarie, Woodruff, Tracey J
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container_issue 6
container_start_page e98771
container_title PloS one
container_volume 9
creator Stotland, Naomi E
Sutton, Patrice
Trowbridge, Jessica
Atchley, Dylan S
Conry, Jeanne
Trasande, Leonardo
Gerbert, Barbara
Charlesworth, Annemarie
Woodruff, Tracey J
description Describe the attitudes, beliefs, and practices of U.S. obstetricians on the topic of prenatal environmental exposures. A national online survey of American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) fellows and 3 focus groups of obstetricians. We received 2,514 eligible survey responses, for a response rate of 14%. The majority (78%) of obstetricians agreed that they can reduce patient exposures to environmental health hazards by counseling patients; but 50% reported that they rarely take an environmental health history; less than 20% reported routinely asking about environmental exposures commonly found in pregnant women in the U.S.; and only 1 in 15 reported any training on the topic. Barriers to counseling included: a lack of knowledge of and uncertainty about the evidence; concerns that patients lack the capacity to reduce harmful exposures; and fear of causing anxiety among patients. U.S. obstetricians in our study recognized the potential impact of the environment on reproductive health, and the role that physicians could play in prevention, but reported numerous barriers to counseling patients. Medical education and training, evidence-based guidelines, and tools for communicating risks to patients are needed to support the clinical role in preventing environmental exposures that threaten patient health.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0098771
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subjects Analysis
Anxiety
Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitudes
Bisphenol A
Communication
Environmental hazards
Environmental health
Environmental Health - education
Environmental impact
Environmental protection
Environmental toxicology
Exposure
Female
Focus groups
Gynecology
Health aspects
Health care
Health hazards
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health maintenance organizations
Health risks
HMOs
Humans
Medical personnel
Medical research
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Mixed methods research
Obstetricians
Obstetrics
Outdoor air quality
Patient Education as Topic
Patients
Pesticides
Physicians
Political activity
Political aspects
Pregnancy
Pregnant women
Prenatal experience
Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects - prevention & control
Public health
Reproductive health
Risk assessment
Studies
Training
Womens health
title Counseling patients on preventing prenatal environmental exposures--a mixed-methods study of obstetricians
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