|
|
||||||||
Original Research |
From the Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC
Correspondence: Corresponding author: C. Randall Clinch, DO, MS, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1084 (E-mail: crclinch{at}wfubmc.edu)
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Methods: Survey data were obtained from a community-based sample of mothers returning to full-time employment within 4 months postpartum. Bivariate analyses (
2 and independent sample t tests) and multivariate logistic regressions were specified.
Results: Eighty-three percent of mothers believed prenatal providers should discuss RTW, yet only 60% had such a discussion; 58% discussed RTW with their infants provider. Black women (odds ratio, 2.6) and women in poverty (odds ratio, 3.6) more often reported having an RTW discussion with a prenatal provider whereas mothers with college degrees or higher (odds ratio, 2.7) more often had RTW discussions with their infant's provider. RTW discussions occurred
3 times and were felt to be only somewhat useful. RTW discussions infrequently centered on maternal health (19.5%) or infant health or development (35.5%).
Conclusions: Women want providers to initiate RTW discussions. Providers should be aware that race, poverty status, and level of maternal education impact a mother's odds of having an RTW discussion. Additional research is required to further delineate the content of RTW discussions and to determine the clinical value of RTW discussions.
The past 4 decades have seen significant increases in the number of women in the labor force. In 1970, 43% of women 16 years or older were in the labor force compared with 59% in 2006.10 Women 16 years of age or older with a child younger than 3 years comprised 56% of the labor force in 2006.10 Two-thirds of women delivering their first child between the years 2001 to 2003 worked during their pregnancy; of those, 58% returned to work within 3 months.11 Despite these shifts in women's employment little is known about the interactions women have with their health care providers regarding their return to work (RTW) after the delivery of a child. Discussing RTW with pregnant or postpartum women fits into the patient-centered care framework because it provides an opportunity to understand a key aspect of women's lives outside of the biomedical condition of pregnancy.
It is widely accepted that women's employment is generally associated with more favorable health outcomes with respect to physical and psychological health12; nevertheless, conflicts that inevitably arise for working parents can undermine some of the health advantages gained by employment. In the general population, difficulty combining work and family has been associated with a greater risk of physical disorders such as hypertension13 and obesity,14 as well as elevated rates of psychiatric disorders.15 Specifically among postpartum women, difficulty combining work and family is associated with greater physical and emotional symptoms and lower self-rated health.16 Indeed, recognizing the potential public health value, the National Institutes of Health has established the Work, Family, Health, and Well-Being Initiative, through which research is being undertaken to identify solutions for minimizing work-family conflict as a comprehensive approach to improving population health.17
Despite the large number of pregnant and postpartum mothers in the labor force and the potential health-related concerns that may accompany RTW, examination of patient-provider communication about RTW has received scant attention. Whether women want providers to discuss issues about RTW and the current frequency and content of such discussions is unknown. The goal of this study was to provide an initial description of patient-provider communication surrounding women's postpartum RTW. To accomplish this goal we (1) described the demographic and personal characteristics of pregnant and postpartum women having a RTW discussion with a provider and (2) documented the frequency, maternal value, and content of RTW discussions between pregnant and postpartum women and providers.
| Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Sample Frame
The sample frame constructed for this study consisted of new mothers working
30 hours per week. All infants born in Forsyth County receive care through a single mother-infant hospital unit at some point during the first week of life. A member of the investigative team (CRC) monitored the daily census of the mother-infant unit and identified mothers who reported working during their pregnancy based on information contained in the electronic medical record. Women identified as being employed were approached in their hospital room after their infant was born, but before discharge, to introduce the study and identify whether the mother was willing to be contacted within the next 3 months about the study. A total of 704 mothers were approached and 630 (89%) provided approval for subsequent contact.
All women in the sampling frame received a series of personal contacts plus nominal mailed gifts. Within 1 week of returning home from the hospital, women entering the sample frame were mailed a personalized "congratulations" card from the investigative team. When the newborn was 1, 2, and 3 months old mothers received age-specific educational materials about their child's development as well as how to evaluate and respond to common illnesses among infants (eg, ear infection, fever). These mailings served 2 purposes. First, like the basic strategy outlined by Dillman18 for promoting good responses to mailed surveys, the mailings were intended to build a sense of personal relationship with and social obligation to the project. Second, the mailings were intended as tracking devices: if mailings were returned, it signaled a need for an alternate strategy for contacting mothers. If a letter was returned, the address was either corrected using the information on the returned mail (ie, a forwarding address) or the mother was contacted by phone to correct the address.
Recruitment
Five hundred eighteen of the 630 mothers granting approval to be contacted were randomly selected for contact and potential recruitment. Eligible study patients were postpartum women (age 18 and older) who (1) had already returned or planned to return to full-time work (
30 hours per week) outside the home by the time their children were 4 months old, and (2) had infants younger than 4 months. Exclusion criteria included having a child with special health care needs or a mother who did not speak English adequately enough to participate in the interview. Recruitment success is illustrated in Figure 1. Of the 288 eligible mothers, 217 agreed to participate and completed a baseline interview, which yielded an overall cooperation rate of 75.3%. Among the 116 mothers ineligible for the study, 94% were ineligible because they did not meet the employment-related inclusion criterion.
|
Measures
Individual Demographic Characteristics
Variables included maternal age, ethnicity (black versus non-Hispanic white), and marital status (currently married vs single). Maternal level of education categories were defined as "<college graduate" (which included high school graduate [including equivalency] or less, some college, or associate's degree); or "college degree or higher" (which included bachelor's, graduate, or professional degree). Annual household income was categorized based on sample quartiles. Income was also categorized as above or below the 2007 poverty thresholds.
Individual Personal Characteristics
Variables included the type of childcare arrangement (family member, formal day care, other); infant feeding method (strictly breastfeeding or not); perceived socioeconomic status,19 length of maternity leave from work; and economic hardship. Economic hardship was assessed by first computing the sum of 2 variables—one that assessed if the mother was having difficulty paying bills and one that assessed the mother's monthly financial status—then dichotomized the result using a split at the median into "less hardship" and "more hardship."
Employment Characteristics
Hours worked were assessed in terms of the total number of hours per week worked on all jobs since the mother returned to work.
Maternal-Provider Communication Characteristics
The literature is devoid of existing items or instruments assessing patient-provider communication among mothers returning to work after the birth of a child. As such, we included questions to identify if mothers were having RTW discussions with their prenatal care provider or their infant's health care provider, the frequency of such discussions, who initiated such discussions, the degree of usefulness mothers placed on such discussions, and if mothers felt providers should have discussions regarding RTW. Questions about the content of RTW discussions asked whether the discussion focused primarily on maternal physical health, maternal mental health, child physical health, child development, or "other." Questions regarding the content of RTW discussions were refined and implemented after baseline interviews were begun. As such, 48.4% of mothers were asked questions about the content of the RTW discussions at the 4-month baseline interview whereas 51.6% of mothers were asked at the 8-month follow-up interview.
Analyses
Bivariate differences were tested using statistics appropriate for metric and type of variable. Differences in proportions between characteristics of women in our sample versus women in the county were tested using Z tests for differences in 2 proportions.
2 tests were used to test associations between 2 categorical variables, such as having had an RTW discussion with a health care provider and maternal education level. Mean comparisons were tested using independent samples t tests. A backwards stepwise model building procedure with likelihood ratio statistics was used to arrive at the most parsimonious logistic regression model for our outcomes of interest (ie, having an RTW discussion or not with the mother's prenatal care provider; having an RTW discussion or not with the infant's health care provider). All variables with P < .20 in bivariate analyses were advanced to multivariate analysis.20 All analyses were conducted using SPSS software version 16.0.2 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Approximately 60% of study participants reported having had an RTW discussion with their prenatal health care providers (Table 2). In bivariate analyses, such discussions were more common among black mothers (P = .003), mothers below the poverty threshold (P = .01), and single mothers (P = .02). Compared with mothers using family members or formal day care arrangements, fewer mothers using "other" childcare arrangements had an RTW discussion with their prenatal care providers (P = .05; Table 2). "Other" childcare arrangement typically involved relying on informal babysitters or multiple childcare arrangements. The average length of maternity leave did not differ between those who had versus those who did not have an RTW discussion with a prenatal care provider (62.0 vs 65.2 days, respectively; P = .28). Results from a multivariate logistic regression model indicated that black mothers (odds ratio, 2.6; P = .006) and those meeting the 2007 poverty threshold (odds ratio, 3.6; P = .047) were more likely than non-Hispanic white mothers and those above the poverty threshold, respectively, to have an RTW discussion with their prenatal care provider. Marital status and childcare arrangements were no longer significant in multivariate analysis.
|
|
|
There was substantial variation in the content of women's RTW discussions with health care providers (Table 4). The content of nearly half (46.3%) of the RTW discussions with prenatal health care providers focused on neither maternal health and well-being nor infant health or development. Indeed, only 19.5% of mothers had an RTW discussion focused on maternal health (ie, physical or mental); 10.6% discussed their infants health or development whereas 23.6% discussed both of these topics. The content of RTW discussions with the infant's health care provider was more focused. Fully one-third (33.6%) reported that the RTW discussion with their infants health care providers centered on infant health or development, whereas 8.4% of mothers had a discussion about maternal health (ie, physical or mental), and 22.7% reported discussing both issues relevant to maternal and child health. Slightly more than one-third of RTW discussions (35.3%) with infants health care providers covered neither maternal nor child health.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The results of this study reveal that health care providers are missing an opportunity to practice patient-centered care; 83.4% of mothers in our sample thought prenatal care providers should talk about RTW as a part of routine prenatal care but only 60% of mothers had these conversations. Such discussions were, overall, infrequent, with the majority of mothers reporting 1 to 3 RTW discussions with their prenatal providers. This suggests that health care providers can enhance their patient-centeredness by initiating RTW discussions with employed women receiving prenatal care. Among those having RTW discussions, most conversations did not center on maternal or child health (ie, "other" was the most frequent content category) and a large proportion found little meaning in the discussions they had. Further research on the content of RTW discussions is necessary to understand the limited meaning mothers placed on RTW discussions. If such discussions centered on more perfunctory tasks (eg, obtaining maternity leave paperwork), limited meaning might be anticipated. Based on the broader patient-centered communication literature,1,5,6,23–25 more meaningful RTW discussions may lead to greater patient satisfaction, potentially better medical management of common health conditions (eg, diabetes, musculoskeletal conditions), and possibly better maternal and infant health outcomes.
An interesting pattern emerged among the women reporting RTW discussions with prenatal versus infant health care providers. Results from a multivariate logistic regression model indicated that the odds of having an RTW discussion with a prenatal health care provider were 2.6 times greater for black than for non-Hispanic white women and 3.6 times greater for women below the poverty threshold than for comparable women living above the poverty level. By contrast, women who could be considered more advantaged (ie, those with a college degree or higher) were 2.7 times more likely to have an RTW discussion with their infant's health care providers compared with those with less education. This suggests that relatively disadvantaged women are more likely to have RTW discussions with their prenatal care provider whereas more advantaged women are more likely to have them with their infant's health care provider. Because only a small proportion of these discussions focused on maternal health and well-being or infant health and development, further research is required to identify the content of the majority of the RTW discussions. In addition, further study is necessary to determine why more than 40% of mothers found such discussions with either their prenatal providers or their infants providers to be only somewhat useful.
The results of this study make important contributions to the literature; nevertheless, they need to be interpreted in light of their limitations. Although our sample is representative of working mothers in Forsyth County, NC, a racially and ethnically diverse metropolitan area, the results of our study may not generalize to other areas. The majority of mothers in our study received their prenatal care from obstetricians; therefore, results may not generalize to mothers receiving their care from family physicians or midwives. We did not collect data specifically about parity or the number of children to which a woman has given birth. Parity may affect a woman's perceived need to initiate an RTW discussion with her provider. Although we chose to collect data on the number of children cared for in the home under the presumption that the number of dependent children was of primary importance, future research should include both variables. In addition, our data are based on maternal self-report, which, despite being a practical method to have used in the current study, is limited in its ability to capture details about communication when compared with audio- or videotaping clinical encounters. Future studies should rely on more sophisticated measures of patient-provider communication collected in a prospective fashion.
| Conclusion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Notes |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Funding: This research was supported by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (R21 HD48601).
Prior presentation: Preliminary results from this paper were presented at the Conference on Families and Health of the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, New Orleans, LA (February 29, 2008).
Conflict of interest: none declared.
Received for publication January 20, 2009. Revision received July 6, 2009. Accepted for publication July 7, 2009.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
M. A. Bowman and A. V. Neale On Postpartum Depression, Hormonal Problems, and Practice Management for Medical Home Implementation J Am Board Fam Med, September 1, 2009; 22(5): 465 - 467. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | CONTACT US | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |