Physical activity in pregnancy: a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Physical activity in pregnancy : a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions. / Knudsen, Signe de Place; Roland, Caroline Borup; Alomairah, Saud Abdulaziz; Jessen, Anne Dsane; Molsted, Stig; Clausen, Tine D.; Løkkegaard, Ellen; Stallknecht, Bente; Bønnelycke, Julie; Bendix, Jane M.; Maindal, Helle Terkildsen.

In: BMC Public Health, Vol. 22, 2283, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Knudsen, SDP, Roland, CB, Alomairah, SA, Jessen, AD, Molsted, S, Clausen, TD, Løkkegaard, E, Stallknecht, B, Bønnelycke, J, Bendix, JM & Maindal, HT 2022, 'Physical activity in pregnancy: a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions', BMC Public Health, vol. 22, 2283. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1

APA

Knudsen, S. D. P., Roland, C. B., Alomairah, S. A., Jessen, A. D., Molsted, S., Clausen, T. D., Løkkegaard, E., Stallknecht, B., Bønnelycke, J., Bendix, J. M., & Maindal, H. T. (2022). Physical activity in pregnancy: a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions. BMC Public Health, 22, [2283]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1

Vancouver

Knudsen SDP, Roland CB, Alomairah SA, Jessen AD, Molsted S, Clausen TD et al. Physical activity in pregnancy: a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions. BMC Public Health. 2022;22. 2283. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1

Author

Knudsen, Signe de Place ; Roland, Caroline Borup ; Alomairah, Saud Abdulaziz ; Jessen, Anne Dsane ; Molsted, Stig ; Clausen, Tine D. ; Løkkegaard, Ellen ; Stallknecht, Bente ; Bønnelycke, Julie ; Bendix, Jane M. ; Maindal, Helle Terkildsen. / Physical activity in pregnancy : a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions. In: BMC Public Health. 2022 ; Vol. 22.

Bibtex

@article{531c99c16c604205a60bc7db055e87e7,
title = "Physical activity in pregnancy: a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions",
abstract = "Background: Physical activity (PA) at moderate intensity is recommended for healthy pregnant women. The three-arm FitMum randomised controlled trial showed that it was possible to increase PA level during pregnancy with structured supervised exercise training (EXE) compared to standard care. Motivational counselling on PA (MOT) did not increase PA. This process evaluation aims to understand the implementation and mechanisms of impact of EXE and MOT. Methods: A mixed methods process evaluation was conducted using the UK Medical Research Council{\textquoteright}s process evaluation framework by assessing implementation (reach, fidelity, and dose) and mechanisms of impact of the two interventions provided to pregnant women in FitMum. Data was collected both quantitatively (n = 220) and qualitatively (n = 20). Results: The FitMum trial reached educated pregnant women (80% having an educational level ≥ bachelor{\textquoteright}s degree) with high autonomy of everyday life. Most participants (58%) were recruited at their first-trimester ultrasonic scan. Reasons to participate were personal (91%) and altruistic (56%). The intervention dose was delivered as intended with high fidelity in the original physical intervention setup and in the altered online setup during the COVID-19 restrictions. A low dose received in EXE (1.3 [95% CI, 1.1; 1.5] sessions/week) was partly explained by the pre-scheduled EXE sessions favouring participants with a flexible everyday life and a supportive social network. Dose received in EXE increased during online intervention delivery. Participants in MOT received 5.2 [4.7; 5.7] of 7 sessions. Mechanisms of impact comprised a perception of intervention commitment among participants in EXE due to the scheduled EXE sessions, whereas participants in MOT considered themselves as PA self-determined. PA was considered as constrained activities in EXE and included in daily activities in MOT. Conclusion: The FitMum interventions was delivered with high fidelity. During COVID-19, the dose received in EXE increased compared to the previous physical setup. Mechanisms of impact as commitment, perception of empowerment and perception of PA as well as the paradox between prioritising PA and family and the need of a flexible everyday life need to be considered when offering pregnant women PA interventions. Future interventions should consider a combination of physical and online exercise training for pregnant women.",
keywords = "Complex interventions, Intervention research, Mixed methods, Physical activity, Pregnancy, Process evaluation",
author = "Knudsen, {Signe de Place} and Roland, {Caroline Borup} and Alomairah, {Saud Abdulaziz} and Jessen, {Anne Dsane} and Stig Molsted and Clausen, {Tine D.} and Ellen L{\o}kkegaard and Bente Stallknecht and Julie B{\o}nnelycke and Bendix, {Jane M.} and Maindal, {Helle Terkildsen}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022, The Author(s).",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical activity in pregnancy

T2 - a mixed methods process evaluation of the FitMum randomised controlled trial interventions

AU - Knudsen, Signe de Place

AU - Roland, Caroline Borup

AU - Alomairah, Saud Abdulaziz

AU - Jessen, Anne Dsane

AU - Molsted, Stig

AU - Clausen, Tine D.

AU - Løkkegaard, Ellen

AU - Stallknecht, Bente

AU - Bønnelycke, Julie

AU - Bendix, Jane M.

AU - Maindal, Helle Terkildsen

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s).

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background: Physical activity (PA) at moderate intensity is recommended for healthy pregnant women. The three-arm FitMum randomised controlled trial showed that it was possible to increase PA level during pregnancy with structured supervised exercise training (EXE) compared to standard care. Motivational counselling on PA (MOT) did not increase PA. This process evaluation aims to understand the implementation and mechanisms of impact of EXE and MOT. Methods: A mixed methods process evaluation was conducted using the UK Medical Research Council’s process evaluation framework by assessing implementation (reach, fidelity, and dose) and mechanisms of impact of the two interventions provided to pregnant women in FitMum. Data was collected both quantitatively (n = 220) and qualitatively (n = 20). Results: The FitMum trial reached educated pregnant women (80% having an educational level ≥ bachelor’s degree) with high autonomy of everyday life. Most participants (58%) were recruited at their first-trimester ultrasonic scan. Reasons to participate were personal (91%) and altruistic (56%). The intervention dose was delivered as intended with high fidelity in the original physical intervention setup and in the altered online setup during the COVID-19 restrictions. A low dose received in EXE (1.3 [95% CI, 1.1; 1.5] sessions/week) was partly explained by the pre-scheduled EXE sessions favouring participants with a flexible everyday life and a supportive social network. Dose received in EXE increased during online intervention delivery. Participants in MOT received 5.2 [4.7; 5.7] of 7 sessions. Mechanisms of impact comprised a perception of intervention commitment among participants in EXE due to the scheduled EXE sessions, whereas participants in MOT considered themselves as PA self-determined. PA was considered as constrained activities in EXE and included in daily activities in MOT. Conclusion: The FitMum interventions was delivered with high fidelity. During COVID-19, the dose received in EXE increased compared to the previous physical setup. Mechanisms of impact as commitment, perception of empowerment and perception of PA as well as the paradox between prioritising PA and family and the need of a flexible everyday life need to be considered when offering pregnant women PA interventions. Future interventions should consider a combination of physical and online exercise training for pregnant women.

AB - Background: Physical activity (PA) at moderate intensity is recommended for healthy pregnant women. The three-arm FitMum randomised controlled trial showed that it was possible to increase PA level during pregnancy with structured supervised exercise training (EXE) compared to standard care. Motivational counselling on PA (MOT) did not increase PA. This process evaluation aims to understand the implementation and mechanisms of impact of EXE and MOT. Methods: A mixed methods process evaluation was conducted using the UK Medical Research Council’s process evaluation framework by assessing implementation (reach, fidelity, and dose) and mechanisms of impact of the two interventions provided to pregnant women in FitMum. Data was collected both quantitatively (n = 220) and qualitatively (n = 20). Results: The FitMum trial reached educated pregnant women (80% having an educational level ≥ bachelor’s degree) with high autonomy of everyday life. Most participants (58%) were recruited at their first-trimester ultrasonic scan. Reasons to participate were personal (91%) and altruistic (56%). The intervention dose was delivered as intended with high fidelity in the original physical intervention setup and in the altered online setup during the COVID-19 restrictions. A low dose received in EXE (1.3 [95% CI, 1.1; 1.5] sessions/week) was partly explained by the pre-scheduled EXE sessions favouring participants with a flexible everyday life and a supportive social network. Dose received in EXE increased during online intervention delivery. Participants in MOT received 5.2 [4.7; 5.7] of 7 sessions. Mechanisms of impact comprised a perception of intervention commitment among participants in EXE due to the scheduled EXE sessions, whereas participants in MOT considered themselves as PA self-determined. PA was considered as constrained activities in EXE and included in daily activities in MOT. Conclusion: The FitMum interventions was delivered with high fidelity. During COVID-19, the dose received in EXE increased compared to the previous physical setup. Mechanisms of impact as commitment, perception of empowerment and perception of PA as well as the paradox between prioritising PA and family and the need of a flexible everyday life need to be considered when offering pregnant women PA interventions. Future interventions should consider a combination of physical and online exercise training for pregnant women.

KW - Complex interventions

KW - Intervention research

KW - Mixed methods

KW - Physical activity

KW - Pregnancy

KW - Process evaluation

U2 - 10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1

DO - 10.1186/s12889-022-14717-1

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36474181

AN - SCOPUS:85143421524

VL - 22

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

M1 - 2283

ER -

ID: 329573303