Publication | Closed Access
Rated helpfulness and partner-reported smoking cessation support across the pregnancy-postpartum continuum.
18
Citations
30
References
2006
Year
Family MedicineReproductive HealthHigh-risk PregnancyTobacco ControlPregnancy-postpartum ContinuumPrenatal CareSupport InterventionsPublic HealthPregnancy PreventionHealth PolicyTobacco UseMaternal ComplicationHealth PromotionMaternal HealthMaternal-fetal MedicineSmoking Cessation RatesPediatricsHealth BehaviorPregnancyFamily PsychologyMedicineWomen's Health
Support interventions have not changed smoking cessation rates significantly. The pregnancy-postpartum continuum presents a unique opportunity to examine patterns of support. Expectant couples (N = 477) were surveyed twice during pregnancy and 3 times postpartum. Partners reported positive and negative smoking-specific support; women reported the helpfulness of partner support. Linear trends suggest that women viewed support as more helpful during pregnancy than during postpartum. Partners' provision of positive support across the continuum depended on their smoking; provision of negative support depended on women's smoking. Partners who smoked provided lower levels of both positive and negative support, especially postpartum. Women who smoked throughout the pregnancy perceived their partner's negative support as helpful. Implications are that partners who smoke may need help staying engaged in the support process. Partners may provide negative support in response to women's smoking cues. Women who are struggling with cessation may not view negative support as negative.
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