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Responses to alcohol and pregnancy policy pilot: midwives' views about proposals to manage risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure

Responses to alcohol and pregnancy policy pilot: midwives' views about proposals to manage risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure
Responses to alcohol and pregnancy policy pilot: midwives' views about proposals to manage risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure
The Responses to Alcohol and Pregnancy Policy (RAPP) Project is a pilot study which seeks to address an evidence gap on midwives’ practice and views on mandatory recording of alcohol use during pregnancy, and transfer of this information to the child health record. The study aims to inform development of UK policy on the risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) and foetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD).

The study sampled the views of qualified midwives currently working in the UK through an online survey and a small number of stakeholder interviews.
Most respondents (82.79%) view recording information about alcohol use during pregnancy as already part of routine antenatal care. 96.9% were in favour of asking about alcohol consumption at the booking appointment, but 55.81% did not support asking questions about alcohol use at every appointment. A high percentage said that mandatory alcohol screening and transfer could have a negative effect on patients (over 80% in each case for feeling judged, guilt and shame), while just over half said they would have a negative effect on their role as a midwife: 52.88% for mandatory alcohol screening; 51.92% for transfer of information. We identified four interrelated themes in the qualitative data: Midwifery as a public health role; Barriers to Relationships, Practical Issues; and Consent and Rights.

Our results and discussion highlight a lack of clarity about key concepts within current UK policy proposals. This leaves open the possibility that existing ideas about behaviour in pregnancy, risk and maternal responsibility will shape implementation.
Pregnancy, Alcohol, Midwifery, Policy, Risk, Risk management
2590-2911
Woollard, Fiona
c3caccc2-68c9-47c8-b2d3-9735d09f1679
Brione, Rebecca E
c45850aa-446b-4efa-b185-1311810bfa15
Arkell, Rachel
29016809-ed96-453e-b1ea-2d1ace297195
Woollard, Fiona
c3caccc2-68c9-47c8-b2d3-9735d09f1679
Brione, Rebecca E
c45850aa-446b-4efa-b185-1311810bfa15
Arkell, Rachel
29016809-ed96-453e-b1ea-2d1ace297195

Woollard, Fiona, Brione, Rebecca E and Arkell, Rachel (2024) Responses to alcohol and pregnancy policy pilot: midwives' views about proposals to manage risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure. Social Sciences & Humanities Open, 10, [101132]. (doi:10.1016/j.ssaho.2024.101132).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Responses to Alcohol and Pregnancy Policy (RAPP) Project is a pilot study which seeks to address an evidence gap on midwives’ practice and views on mandatory recording of alcohol use during pregnancy, and transfer of this information to the child health record. The study aims to inform development of UK policy on the risks associated with prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) and foetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD).

The study sampled the views of qualified midwives currently working in the UK through an online survey and a small number of stakeholder interviews.
Most respondents (82.79%) view recording information about alcohol use during pregnancy as already part of routine antenatal care. 96.9% were in favour of asking about alcohol consumption at the booking appointment, but 55.81% did not support asking questions about alcohol use at every appointment. A high percentage said that mandatory alcohol screening and transfer could have a negative effect on patients (over 80% in each case for feeling judged, guilt and shame), while just over half said they would have a negative effect on their role as a midwife: 52.88% for mandatory alcohol screening; 51.92% for transfer of information. We identified four interrelated themes in the qualitative data: Midwifery as a public health role; Barriers to Relationships, Practical Issues; and Consent and Rights.

Our results and discussion highlight a lack of clarity about key concepts within current UK policy proposals. This leaves open the possibility that existing ideas about behaviour in pregnancy, risk and maternal responsibility will shape implementation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 September 2024
Published date: 17 September 2024
Keywords: Pregnancy, Alcohol, Midwifery, Policy, Risk, Risk management

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494637
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494637
ISSN: 2590-2911
PURE UUID: aac89ccc-4335-48b8-8aab-da8e360be433

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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2024 16:52
Last modified: 11 Oct 2024 16:52

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Contributors

Author: Fiona Woollard
Author: Rebecca E Brione
Author: Rachel Arkell

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