Development and Pilot Use of a Questionnaire to Assess the Knowledge of Midwives and Pediatric Nurses on Maternal Use of Analgesics during Lactation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Development of the Instrument
2.2. Content Validation
2.3. Pilot Use of the Instrument
3. Results
3.1. Development of the Instrument
3.1.1. Step 1, Literature Screening
3.1.2. Step 2, Focus Groups
3.2. Content Validation of the Instrument
3.3. Pilot Use of the Instrument: Construct Validity Based on Known-Groups Validity
4. Discussion
4.1. Main Findings
4.2. Strenghts and Limitations
4.3. Future Perspectives
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Methods | Main Findings |
---|---|---|
Al-Sawalha et al. [16] | After a pilot study (n = 10), a self-constructed (approach not described) questionnaire was distributed to HCPs (nurses, pharmacists, physicians) in Jordan. This questionnaire had 23 questions (on demographics, attitudes on medicine use during lactation and knowledge) related to the most commonly used medicines during lactation. | 904 responses, 44% nurses (no sub-specialties mentioned). 27% advised to always stop or interrupt breastfeeding whenever a lactating mother took any medicine. Awareness on recommendations was lower in nurses (OR 0.21) compared to physicians. 80% of HCPs considered themselves as having a low level of knowledge, even lower in nurses (OR 0.10). A request to add this topic to curricula and professional continuing education. |
Spiesser-Robelet et al. [18] | Scoping review on literature sources on breastfeeding mothers’ knowledge, representations, attitudes and behaviors about medicines resulted in 18 papers and 15 studies. Questionnaire development was not assessed, nor discussed. | Most (12/15) studies were quantitative, with HCPs as the target audience and questionnaires were commonly (8/15) used. The studies reflect an almost systematic conflict for the mothers between taking medicines and breastfeeding. Studies describe safety behaviors of breastfeeding women taking medicines, but do not allow them to understand how breastfeeding mothers’ behaviors were constructed. Items were maternal knowledge (n = 2), social representations (n = 4), attitudes (n = 1) and behaviors (incidence, acceptability, or consequence of medicine use during lactation, measures to reduce infant exposure). |
Colaceci et al. [19] | State-of-the-art development of a questionnaire, using a mixed methods study, with the construction of the questionnaire based on four categories (experience, medicines versus natural products, access to information and adverse reactions), subsequently administered to 248 pregnant women or mothers. | Women showed three attitudes: discontinue breastfeeding in order to take the medicine, “endure the pain” or use ‘natural products’ as these are perceived to be safer. Information sources for lactation management were pediatricians (46%), midwives (24%) and prescribers (10%), reflecting the relevance of HCPs. |
Verstegen et al. [20] | Narrative review, with a focus on the clinical pharmacology of lactation related medicine exposure and methods to assess exposure and effects. | Specific section on the lactation compatibility of analgesics, anesthetics and sedatives. Acetaminophen and non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs are safe. Opioids can be used safely for short-term pain management, with the need for more intense monitoring (lethargy, respiratory depression) when longer treatment duration is needed. |
Amundsen et al. [21] | Cross-sectional questionnaire among 401 women with migraine, either pregnant or in postpartum (<18 months). The development of the questionnaire has not been described, but a pilot (n = 6) was done, with only minor adaptations afterwards. | The majority severely overestimated the risk associated with migraine medicines during pregnancy or lactation. Women who reported medicine use were more positive and overestimated lesser the risks of such medicines compared with their counterparts. |
Wolgast et al. [22] | Questionnaire on the use, perceptions towards the use and perceptions about pregnancy outcomes in association with medicines during pregnancy and lactation. In total, 850 women participated. Its development was based on two questions from a former questionnaire. | The majority (58%) perceived medicines during lactation as (probably) harmful and perceived herbal medicines as less harmful (21%). Women had great confidence in advice form a physician (84%) or midwife (77%). |
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Janssens, I.; Van Hauwe, M.; Ceulemans, M.; Allegaert, K. Development and Pilot Use of a Questionnaire to Assess the Knowledge of Midwives and Pediatric Nurses on Maternal Use of Analgesics during Lactation. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 11555. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111555
Janssens I, Van Hauwe M, Ceulemans M, Allegaert K. Development and Pilot Use of a Questionnaire to Assess the Knowledge of Midwives and Pediatric Nurses on Maternal Use of Analgesics during Lactation. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(21):11555. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111555
Chicago/Turabian StyleJanssens, Ine, Margot Van Hauwe, Michael Ceulemans, and Karel Allegaert. 2021. "Development and Pilot Use of a Questionnaire to Assess the Knowledge of Midwives and Pediatric Nurses on Maternal Use of Analgesics during Lactation" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 21: 11555. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111555