AI Article Synopsis

  • Social support and perceived self-efficacy significantly influence mothers' health-related behaviors and adaptability during pregnancy, prompting this study to explore their effects on prenatal care.
  • The research involved a before-and-after experimental design with 90 first-time pregnant women, divided into experimental and control groups to evaluate educational interventions related to social support and self-efficacy.
  • Results showed a notable increase in prenatal care scores in the experimental group post-intervention, highlighting how social support and self-efficacy improve maternal care and emphasizing the need for supportive structures from health systems and society to enhance these factors in pregnant women.

Article Abstract

Social support and perceived self-efficacy affect health-related behaviors and play an important role on mothers' adaptability with pregnancy. This paper aims to study the impact of educational interventions based on social support and perceived self-efficacy on maternal prenatal care. The present study is a before after experimental study in which 90 first-time pregnant women were randomly selected and divided into two 45- participants experimental and control groups. Data were collected from 21 January to 20 May 2016. Determining the validity and reliability of the questionnaire, we used the panel of experts and Cronbach's alpha. The data collected from the two groups were compared before and 3 months after intervention and were analyzed by SPSS 18. Unlike the control subjects, there was a significant difference in maternal prenatal cares before and after an educational intervention between the scores of social support and perceived self-efficacy in the experimental group (p < 0.05). Before intervention, the average score of the experimental group was 12.62 ± 2.63 that rose to 17.71 ± 1.56, three months after the educational intervention, which is statistically significant (p < 0.05). There was a direct and positive relation between self-efficacy and maternal prenatal cares (p = 0.000, r = 0.538). Social support and self-efficacy predicted the variance of maternal cares by 69.2%. Developing an educational program based on social support and perceived self-efficacy on maternal prenatal cares is helpful and efficient. The health system, family and society are in charge of making facilities and opportunities to improve social support and perceived self-efficacy in pregnant women, resulting in improved maternal prenatal cares.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5742666PMC

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