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Exploring the implementation of an educational film within antenatal care to reduce the risk of cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: a qualitative study

Exploring the implementation of an educational film within antenatal care to reduce the risk of cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: a qualitative study
Exploring the implementation of an educational film within antenatal care to reduce the risk of cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: a qualitative study

Background: congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a leading cause of sensorineural hearing loss and neuro-disability in childhood. In the absence of a licensed vaccine, adoption of hygiene-based measures may reduce the risk of CMV infection in pregnancy, however these measures are not routinely discussed with pregnant women as part of National Health Service (NHS) antenatal care in the United Kingdom (UK).

Methods: an exploratory qualitative study was conducted, underpinned by Normalization Process Theory (NPT), to investigate how an educational intervention comprising of a short film about CMV may best be implemented, sustained, and enhanced in real-world routine antenatal care settings. Video, semi-structured interviews were conducted with participants who were recruited using a purposive sample that comprised of midwives providing antenatal care from three NHS hospitals (n = 15) and participants from professional colleges and from organisations or charities providing, or with an interest in, antenatal education or health information in the UK (n = 15).

FINDINGS: midwives were reluctant to include CMV as part of early pregnancy discussions about reducing the risk of other infections due to lack of time, knowledge and absence of guidance or policies relating to CMV in antenatal education. However, the educational intervention was perceived to be a useful tool to encourage conversations and empower women to manage risk by all stakeholders, which would overcome some identified barriers. Macro-level challenges such as screening policies and lack of official guidelines to legitimise dissemination were identified.

Discussion: successful implementation of education about CMV as part of routine NHS care in the UK will require an increase in awareness and knowledge about CMV amongst midwives. NPT revealed that 'coherence' and 'cognitive participation' between service members are vital to imbed CMV education in routine practice. 'Collective action' and 'reflexive monitoring' is required to sustain service changes.

Adult, Cytomegalovirus Infections/prevention & control, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Midwifery/education, Motion Pictures, Patient Education as Topic/methods, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/prevention & control, Prenatal Care/methods, Qualitative Research, State Medicine, United Kingdom, Implementation science, Improvement science, Normalisation Process Theory, Healthcare education, Congenital Cytomegalovirus CMV
1471-2393
Vandrevala, Tushna
45ccaf5a-cb30-40df-ba91-1ef166672468
Montague, Amy
13c24d92-41bf-46aa-829a-e31037691ad8
Boulton, Richard
aee3108f-5b9e-4673-aacd-09b87565bf03
Coxon, Kirstie
d5d5456a-fa31-4ea6-ad76-c5d1d5d8e88f
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Vandrevala, Tushna
45ccaf5a-cb30-40df-ba91-1ef166672468
Montague, Amy
13c24d92-41bf-46aa-829a-e31037691ad8
Boulton, Richard
aee3108f-5b9e-4673-aacd-09b87565bf03
Coxon, Kirstie
d5d5456a-fa31-4ea6-ad76-c5d1d5d8e88f
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426

Vandrevala, Tushna, Montague, Amy, Boulton, Richard, Coxon, Kirstie and Jones, Christine E. (2024) Exploring the implementation of an educational film within antenatal care to reduce the risk of cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: a qualitative study. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 24 (1), [524]. (doi:10.1186/s12884-024-06715-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a leading cause of sensorineural hearing loss and neuro-disability in childhood. In the absence of a licensed vaccine, adoption of hygiene-based measures may reduce the risk of CMV infection in pregnancy, however these measures are not routinely discussed with pregnant women as part of National Health Service (NHS) antenatal care in the United Kingdom (UK).

Methods: an exploratory qualitative study was conducted, underpinned by Normalization Process Theory (NPT), to investigate how an educational intervention comprising of a short film about CMV may best be implemented, sustained, and enhanced in real-world routine antenatal care settings. Video, semi-structured interviews were conducted with participants who were recruited using a purposive sample that comprised of midwives providing antenatal care from three NHS hospitals (n = 15) and participants from professional colleges and from organisations or charities providing, or with an interest in, antenatal education or health information in the UK (n = 15).

FINDINGS: midwives were reluctant to include CMV as part of early pregnancy discussions about reducing the risk of other infections due to lack of time, knowledge and absence of guidance or policies relating to CMV in antenatal education. However, the educational intervention was perceived to be a useful tool to encourage conversations and empower women to manage risk by all stakeholders, which would overcome some identified barriers. Macro-level challenges such as screening policies and lack of official guidelines to legitimise dissemination were identified.

Discussion: successful implementation of education about CMV as part of routine NHS care in the UK will require an increase in awareness and knowledge about CMV amongst midwives. NPT revealed that 'coherence' and 'cognitive participation' between service members are vital to imbed CMV education in routine practice. 'Collective action' and 'reflexive monitoring' is required to sustain service changes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 July 2024
Published date: 10 August 2024
Keywords: Adult, Cytomegalovirus Infections/prevention & control, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Midwifery/education, Motion Pictures, Patient Education as Topic/methods, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/prevention & control, Prenatal Care/methods, Qualitative Research, State Medicine, United Kingdom, Implementation science, Improvement science, Normalisation Process Theory, Healthcare education, Congenital Cytomegalovirus CMV

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493577
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493577
ISSN: 1471-2393
PURE UUID: 524e8a97-622e-4835-b1c1-3ff0c9288c35
ORCID for Christine E. Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1523-2368

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 06 Sep 2024 16:48
Last modified: 07 Sep 2024 01:52

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Contributors

Author: Tushna Vandrevala
Author: Amy Montague
Author: Richard Boulton
Author: Kirstie Coxon

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