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Pregnancy intention, preconception health, health behaviours, and information and health advice seeking among expectant male partners

Pregnancy intention, preconception health, health behaviours, and information and health advice seeking among expectant male partners
Pregnancy intention, preconception health, health behaviours, and information and health advice seeking among expectant male partners
Background: attempting pregnancy as a conscious decision (pregnancy intention) can impact the likelihood that a future parent receives or seeks preconception health information, initiates discussions with health professionals, and ultimately optimises their health and behaviours in preparation for healthy pregnancy and child. Knowledge about the relationship between men’s preconception health behaviours and their pregnancy intention is only emerging.

Methods: this study aimed to describe the preconception health status, behaviours, information- and advice-seeking of male expectant partners, and to explore differences in these preconception factors based on pregnancy intention. An online retrospective cross-sectional survey was completed by male reproductive partners of pregnant females. Their pregnancy intention was assessed using the London Measure of Unplanned Pregnancy (LMUP). Participants were recruited via social media and all variables were self-reported by expectant partners. Chi-square tests examined differences by LMUP categories (planned or ambivalent/unplanned).

Results: of 156 expectant partners who consented to survey participation, 138 completed all LMUP questions and were included in analysis. Most expectant partners reported their partner’s current pregnancy as planned (n = 90;65.2%), less than half reported looking for and finding information about becoming pregnant (40.0%). Expectant partners with planned pregnancy more often reported physical exercise three months before pregnancy compared with partners with unplanned/ambivalent pregnancy (p = 0.001). Expectant partners with ambivalent/unplanned pregnancy more often experienced longstanding illness, disability, or infirmity (p = 0.002) or disregarded contraception (p < 0.001). Despite perceiving good or excellent health, and undertaking physical exercise, numerous expectant partners with planned pregnancy had overweight. Further research exploring the reproductive life plan process for males with longstanding chronic illness or disability may help promote pregnancy planning and preconception health amongst this sub-population.

Conclusions: further large-scale studies are needed to enable clinicians to better understand pregnancy intentions and preconception health of males and for policy makers to formulate health policies aimed at supporting male preconception health and awareness.
Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Status, Humans, Information Seeking Behavior, Intention, Male, Preconception Care, Pregnancy, Pregnancy, Unplanned/psychology, Retrospective Studies, Sexual Partners/psychology, Young Adult, Health behaviours, Preconception, Pregnancy intention
2731-4553
Carter, Tristan
d32affa0-004c-4a98-aa1b-024eb3defd47
Schoenaker, Danielle
84b96b87-4070-45a5-9777-5a1e4e45e818
Adams, Jon
12b2c9e7-6fdb-41e3-8d4d-33a44ceffb3e
Steel, Amie
947b68e3-582e-4040-b2c0-1927f0d30932
Carter, Tristan
d32affa0-004c-4a98-aa1b-024eb3defd47
Schoenaker, Danielle
84b96b87-4070-45a5-9777-5a1e4e45e818
Adams, Jon
12b2c9e7-6fdb-41e3-8d4d-33a44ceffb3e
Steel, Amie
947b68e3-582e-4040-b2c0-1927f0d30932

Carter, Tristan, Schoenaker, Danielle, Adams, Jon and Steel, Amie (2025) Pregnancy intention, preconception health, health behaviours, and information and health advice seeking among expectant male partners. BMC Primary Care, 26 (1), [36]. (doi:10.1186/s12875-025-02703-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: attempting pregnancy as a conscious decision (pregnancy intention) can impact the likelihood that a future parent receives or seeks preconception health information, initiates discussions with health professionals, and ultimately optimises their health and behaviours in preparation for healthy pregnancy and child. Knowledge about the relationship between men’s preconception health behaviours and their pregnancy intention is only emerging.

Methods: this study aimed to describe the preconception health status, behaviours, information- and advice-seeking of male expectant partners, and to explore differences in these preconception factors based on pregnancy intention. An online retrospective cross-sectional survey was completed by male reproductive partners of pregnant females. Their pregnancy intention was assessed using the London Measure of Unplanned Pregnancy (LMUP). Participants were recruited via social media and all variables were self-reported by expectant partners. Chi-square tests examined differences by LMUP categories (planned or ambivalent/unplanned).

Results: of 156 expectant partners who consented to survey participation, 138 completed all LMUP questions and were included in analysis. Most expectant partners reported their partner’s current pregnancy as planned (n = 90;65.2%), less than half reported looking for and finding information about becoming pregnant (40.0%). Expectant partners with planned pregnancy more often reported physical exercise three months before pregnancy compared with partners with unplanned/ambivalent pregnancy (p = 0.001). Expectant partners with ambivalent/unplanned pregnancy more often experienced longstanding illness, disability, or infirmity (p = 0.002) or disregarded contraception (p < 0.001). Despite perceiving good or excellent health, and undertaking physical exercise, numerous expectant partners with planned pregnancy had overweight. Further research exploring the reproductive life plan process for males with longstanding chronic illness or disability may help promote pregnancy planning and preconception health amongst this sub-population.

Conclusions: further large-scale studies are needed to enable clinicians to better understand pregnancy intentions and preconception health of males and for policy makers to formulate health policies aimed at supporting male preconception health and awareness.

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s12875-025-02703-6 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 January 2025
Published date: 12 February 2025
Keywords: Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Status, Humans, Information Seeking Behavior, Intention, Male, Preconception Care, Pregnancy, Pregnancy, Unplanned/psychology, Retrospective Studies, Sexual Partners/psychology, Young Adult, Health behaviours, Preconception, Pregnancy intention

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499061
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499061
ISSN: 2731-4553
PURE UUID: d041eccb-896d-48d8-a97e-42aecab5e4e5
ORCID for Danielle Schoenaker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7652-990X

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Date deposited: 07 Mar 2025 17:42
Last modified: 30 Aug 2025 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Tristan Carter
Author: Jon Adams
Author: Amie Steel

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