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What does 'preconception health' mean to people? A public consultation on awareness and use of language.

What does 'preconception health' mean to people? A public consultation on awareness and use of language.
What does 'preconception health' mean to people? A public consultation on awareness and use of language.
Introduction: there is growing scientific and policy recognition that optimising health before a potential pregnancy (preconception health) improves reproductive outcomes and the lifelong health of future children. However, public awareness on this topic is low. We conducted a public consultation to develop language recommendations and identify and prioritise approaches to inform research and improve public awareness of preconception health.

Methods: a public consultation was undertaken with people of any gender aged 18–50 years living in the United Kingdom who were not currently expecting a child. Public contributors were recruited through patient and public involvement, community and support groups, an existing cohort study, and an LGBTQ+ charity. An initial round of online group discussions (February/March 2021) explored public contributors' knowledge of preconception health, their recommendations for appropriate language, and ideas about public health approaches. In a subsequent discussion round (May 2021), language recommendations were refined and suggested approaches prioritised. Discussions were summarised based on notes taken by two researchers.

Results: fifty-four people joined the initial discussion round (66% women, 21% men, 13% nonbinary or transgender; 55% aged 18–30 years, 30% 31–40 years, 15% 41–50 years). Of these, 36 people (67%) participated in the subsequent round. Very few had heard the term ‘preconception health’, understood what it means, or why and for whom it is important. They recommended avoiding unfamiliar terms without further explanation (e.g., preconception health, medical terms), using language that is positive, encouraging and gender-sensitive where possible, and using messages that are specific, nonjudgmental and realistic. The phrases ‘health and well-being during the childbearing years’, ‘health and well-being before pregnancy and parenthood’ and ‘planning for parenthood’ resonated with most public contributors. School-based education, social media campaigns and the National Health Service emerged as priority approaches/settings for raising awareness.

Conclusion: this public consultation produced recommendations from a diverse group of people of reproductive age in the United Kingdom to improve language and prioritise approaches that increase public understanding of preconception health in ways that are relevant and appropriate to them. This should begin in schools and will require adaptation of curricula, alongside co-development of public awareness campaigns and guidance for healthcare professionals.
1369-6513
Schoenaker, Danielle
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Gafari, Olatundun
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Taylor, Elizabeth
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Hall, Jennifer
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Barker, Caroline
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Jones, Barney
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Alwan, Nisreen A
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Watson, Daniella
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Jacob, Chandni
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Barker, Mary
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Godfrey, Keith
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Reason, Emily
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Forder, Finlay
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Stephenson, Judith
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UK Preconception Partnership
Schoenaker, Danielle
84b96b87-4070-45a5-9777-5a1e4e45e818
Gafari, Olatundun
3c7158eb-682c-468c-90a3-6f40a1484255
Taylor, Elizabeth
880bd662-b8bb-46a2-8db1-7fe31bd540ae
Hall, Jennifer
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Barker, Caroline
f9da4841-24b4-431a-833c-b4b5ec66a4da
Jones, Barney
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Alwan, Nisreen A
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Watson, Daniella
43f87754-da59-4614-9a4d-3af58e499b6f
Jacob, Chandni
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Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Godfrey, Keith
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Reason, Emily
f9cbe314-288e-46ff-ab27-f6b305a827b3
Forder, Finlay
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Stephenson, Judith
b115169f-d010-4c24-8654-222613c3ed5c

Schoenaker, Danielle, Gafari, Olatundun, Taylor, Elizabeth, Hall, Jennifer, Barker, Caroline, Jones, Barney, Alwan, Nisreen A, Watson, Daniella, Jacob, Chandni, Barker, Mary, Godfrey, Keith, Reason, Emily, Forder, Finlay and Stephenson, Judith , UK Preconception Partnership (2024) What does 'preconception health' mean to people? A public consultation on awareness and use of language. Health Expectations, 27 (4), [e14181]. (doi:10.1111/hex.14181).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: there is growing scientific and policy recognition that optimising health before a potential pregnancy (preconception health) improves reproductive outcomes and the lifelong health of future children. However, public awareness on this topic is low. We conducted a public consultation to develop language recommendations and identify and prioritise approaches to inform research and improve public awareness of preconception health.

Methods: a public consultation was undertaken with people of any gender aged 18–50 years living in the United Kingdom who were not currently expecting a child. Public contributors were recruited through patient and public involvement, community and support groups, an existing cohort study, and an LGBTQ+ charity. An initial round of online group discussions (February/March 2021) explored public contributors' knowledge of preconception health, their recommendations for appropriate language, and ideas about public health approaches. In a subsequent discussion round (May 2021), language recommendations were refined and suggested approaches prioritised. Discussions were summarised based on notes taken by two researchers.

Results: fifty-four people joined the initial discussion round (66% women, 21% men, 13% nonbinary or transgender; 55% aged 18–30 years, 30% 31–40 years, 15% 41–50 years). Of these, 36 people (67%) participated in the subsequent round. Very few had heard the term ‘preconception health’, understood what it means, or why and for whom it is important. They recommended avoiding unfamiliar terms without further explanation (e.g., preconception health, medical terms), using language that is positive, encouraging and gender-sensitive where possible, and using messages that are specific, nonjudgmental and realistic. The phrases ‘health and well-being during the childbearing years’, ‘health and well-being before pregnancy and parenthood’ and ‘planning for parenthood’ resonated with most public contributors. School-based education, social media campaigns and the National Health Service emerged as priority approaches/settings for raising awareness.

Conclusion: this public consultation produced recommendations from a diverse group of people of reproductive age in the United Kingdom to improve language and prioritise approaches that increase public understanding of preconception health in ways that are relevant and appropriate to them. This should begin in schools and will require adaptation of curricula, alongside co-development of public awareness campaigns and guidance for healthcare professionals.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 August 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494202
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494202
ISSN: 1369-6513
PURE UUID: 0afc2f2a-d603-4793-8af4-728017151581
ORCID for Danielle Schoenaker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7652-990X
ORCID for Olatundun Gafari: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3416-5084
ORCID for Elizabeth Taylor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7680-2865
ORCID for Nisreen A Alwan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-8463
ORCID for Chandni Jacob: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2024-0074
ORCID for Mary Barker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2976-0217
ORCID for Keith Godfrey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4643-0618

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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2024 14:35
Last modified: 05 Oct 2024 02:08

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Contributors

Author: Olatundun Gafari ORCID iD
Author: Elizabeth Taylor ORCID iD
Author: Jennifer Hall
Author: Caroline Barker
Author: Barney Jones
Author: Nisreen A Alwan ORCID iD
Author: Daniella Watson
Author: Chandni Jacob ORCID iD
Author: Mary Barker ORCID iD
Author: Keith Godfrey ORCID iD
Author: Emily Reason
Author: Finlay Forder
Author: Judith Stephenson
Corporate Author: UK Preconception Partnership

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