TY - JOUR
T1 - Setting preconception care priorities in Australia using a Delphi technique
AU - Boyle, Jacqueline A.
AU - Black, Kirsten
AU - Dorney, Edwina
AU - Amor, David J.
AU - Brown, Louise
AU - Callander, Emily
AU - Camilleri, Renea
AU - Cheney, Kate
AU - Gordon, Adrienne
AU - Hammarberg, Karin
AU - Jeyapalan, Dheepa
AU - Leahy, Deana
AU - Millard, Jo
AU - Mills, Catherine
AU - Musgrave, Loretta
AU - Norman, Robert J.
AU - O'Brien, Claire
AU - Roach, Vijay
AU - Skouteris, Helen
AU - Steel, Amie
AU - Walker, Sue
AU - Walker, Ruth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Preconception health affects fertility, pregnancy, and future health outcomes but public awareness of this is low. Our aims were to rank priorities for preconception care (PCC), develop strategies to address these priorities, and establish values to guide future work in preconception healthcare in Australia. A Delphi technique involved two rounds of online voting and mid-round workshops. Inputs were a scoping review of PCC guidelines, a priority setting framework and existing networks that focus on health. During July and August, 2021, 23 multidisciplinary experts in PCC or social care, including a consumer advocate, completed the Delphi technique. Ten priority areas were identified, with health behaviors, medical history, weight, and reproductive health ranked most highly. Six strategies were identified. Underpinning values encompassed engagement with stakeholders, a life course view of preconception health, an integrated multi-sectorial approach and a need for large scale collaboration to implement interventions that deliver impact across health care, social care, policy and population health. Priority populations were considered within the social determinants of health. Health behaviors, medical history, weight, and reproductive health were ranked highly as PCC priorities. Key strategies to address priorities should be implemented with consideration of values that improve the preconception health of all Australians.
AB - Preconception health affects fertility, pregnancy, and future health outcomes but public awareness of this is low. Our aims were to rank priorities for preconception care (PCC), develop strategies to address these priorities, and establish values to guide future work in preconception healthcare in Australia. A Delphi technique involved two rounds of online voting and mid-round workshops. Inputs were a scoping review of PCC guidelines, a priority setting framework and existing networks that focus on health. During July and August, 2021, 23 multidisciplinary experts in PCC or social care, including a consumer advocate, completed the Delphi technique. Ten priority areas were identified, with health behaviors, medical history, weight, and reproductive health ranked most highly. Six strategies were identified. Underpinning values encompassed engagement with stakeholders, a life course view of preconception health, an integrated multi-sectorial approach and a need for large scale collaboration to implement interventions that deliver impact across health care, social care, policy and population health. Priority populations were considered within the social determinants of health. Health behaviors, medical history, weight, and reproductive health were ranked highly as PCC priorities. Key strategies to address priorities should be implemented with consideration of values that improve the preconception health of all Australians.
KW - consensus
KW - health care
KW - preconception care
KW - primary care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134013649&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1055/s-0042-1749683
DO - 10.1055/s-0042-1749683
M3 - Article
C2 - 35760312
AN - SCOPUS:85134013649
SN - 1526-8004
VL - 40
SP - 214
EP - 226
JO - Seminars in Reproductive Medicine
JF - Seminars in Reproductive Medicine
IS - 03/04
ER -