1. Midwives' attitudes to counselling women about their smoking behaviour during pregnancy and postpartum.
- Author
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Thyrian JR, Hannöver W, Röske K, Scherbarth S, Hapke U, and John U
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: to investigate the attitudes of midwives to counselling women about their smoking behaviour during pregnancy and postpartum. DESIGN: survey using postal questionnaires. SETTING: the entire federal state of Mecklenburg-West-Pomerania in Germany. PARTICIPANTS: 189 midwives constituting 77% of all midwives working in that State. FINDINGS: midwives reported that they assessed smoking behaviour regularly (77%), addressed the consequences of smoking (70%) and advised women to quit. Among the midwives, 81% saw low chances of success and parents' expectations as the biggest barriers to counselling. Midwives reported that about 28% of women quit following their advice. KEY CONCLUSIONS: smoking and exposure to environmental tobacco smoke are seen as prominent health threats that midwives reported they addressed routinely, including giving advice to stop smoking. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: midwives should be supported in learning effective intervention strategies to further strengthen their work. They are a target population to deliver brief smoking interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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