Alcohol Use During Pregnancy and Motherhood: Attitudes and Experiences of Pregnant Women, Mothers, and Healthcare Professionals, 2018-2019

DOI

Alcohol is the most used substance by women of childbearing age. Alcohol exposed pregnancies can have serious consequences to the fetus, and the UK has one of the highest rates of drinking during pregnancy. Alcohol use during motherhood is also a public health concern, linked with potential harms to the woman and child. This qualitative study investigated the attitudes and experiences of pregnant/parenting women and healthcare professionals regarding maternal drinking. A semi-structured focus group and interviews were conducted in the North West of England with pregnant women, mothers, and healthcare professionals. Quantitative measures captured demographics, alcohol use, and screened for mental ill-health for pregnant women and mothers. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to analyse narratives. Findings revealed that most participants believed avoiding alcohol during pregnancy is the safest option. However, some pregnant women and mothers stated that there was insufficient evidence to demonstrate the harms of low-level drinking and that abstinence guidelines were patronising. All participants reported that low-level drinking during motherhood was acceptable. Heavy drinking was believed to pose serious harm during pregnancy and motherhood to the baby and mother, in addition to damaging relationships. Strong motives were revealed for choosing and avoiding to drink, such as coping with the difficulties of motherhood and parental responsibilities, respectively. Contradictions were found across quantitative and qualitative self-reports of consumption, reflecting potential underreporting of alcohol use. Additionally, drinking levels were discussed in extremes only (low/heavy) without considering ‘grey area’ drinking. Clear, consistent advice and guidelines are needed to support women in reducing their alcohol use during pregnancy and motherhood. These should include the unique potential risks regarding maternal drinking, and the harm attributable to non-clinically dependent alcohol use. The maternal participants in this study were middle-class, therefore, research is needed to capture the views and experiences of women of all socioeconomic backgrounds.Despite recommendations of abstinence, the UK has one of the highest reported prevalence rates of alcohol exposed pregnancy and foetal alcohol spectrum disorder in the world. Additionally, maternal drinking when not pregnant can be associated with increased risk of alcohol harm both for the mother and child. This study sought to identify attitudes around the motives and impact of alcohol use during pregnancy and motherhood, and whether these attitudes differed depending on the population (pregnant women, non-pregnant mothers, and healthcare professionals). By identifying the drivers and impact of maternal drinking, evidence-based interventions can be developed, tailored to supporting maternal populations drinking within relevant recommendation alcohol guidelines. Focus groups and semi-structured interviews were conducted to explore attitudes around maternal alcohol use from 6 pregnant women, 8 mothers, and 7 healthcare professionals. Audio recordings were transcribed verbatim. Transcriptions were coded and categorised using content analysis and reflexive thematic analysis.

Participants: pregnant women (n=6), mothers with dependent children (defined as children under 18 years of age living at home) (n=8), and relevant healthcare professionals (n=7). To be eligible, participants had to be 18 years or older, be pregnant and/or the mother of one or more children of dependent age and/or a healthcare professional, be a fluent English speaker, and be able to provide informed consent. The study was advertised on social media and through distributing posters/flyers at public establishments in advantaged and disadvantaged neighbourhoods. Focus groups and semi-structured interviews.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-856066
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=cfd9048fb54dfd6d52330f8b44682751cda0835bac0c23bdaac09b698c60619c
Provenance
Creator Rose, A, Liverpool John Moores University; Goodwin, L, University of Lancaster; Ujhelyi Gomez, K, University of Liverpool; Chisholm, A, University of Liverpool
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2022
Funding Reference Liverpool Clinical Commissioning Group
Rights Abigail Rose, Liverpool John Moores University; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service. Commercial Use of data is not permitted.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Text
Discipline Psychology; Social and Behavioural Sciences
Spatial Coverage Merseyside, North West England; United Kingdom