The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.

A father's involvement in prenatal care engenders health benefits for both mothers and children. While this information can help practitioners improve family health, low paternal involvement in prenatal care remains a challenge. The present study tested a simple, easily scalable intervention to...

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Main Authors: Analia F Albuja, Diana T Sanchez, Shawna J Lee, Joyce Y Lee, Stacy Yadava
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216454
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spelling doaj-183d9c414e8a46d3a5bda323a27d4f522021-03-03T20:41:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021645410.1371/journal.pone.0216454The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.Analia F AlbujaDiana T SanchezShawna J LeeJoyce Y LeeStacy YadavaA father's involvement in prenatal care engenders health benefits for both mothers and children. While this information can help practitioners improve family health, low paternal involvement in prenatal care remains a challenge. The present study tested a simple, easily scalable intervention to promote father involvement by increasing men's feelings of comfort and expectations of involvement in prenatal settings through three randomized control trials. Borrowing from social psychological theory on identity safety, the three studies tested whether the inclusion of environmental cues that represent men and fatherhood in prenatal care offices influenced men's beliefs and behavioral intentions during the perinatal period. Men in studies 1 and 3 viewed online videos of purported prenatal care offices, while men in study 2 visited the office in person. Those who viewed or were immersed in a father-friendly prenatal care office believed that doctors had higher expectations of father involvement compared to treatment-as-usual. This perception predicted greater parenting confidence, comfort, and behavioral intentions to learn about the pregnancy and engage in healthy habits, such as avoiding smoking and alcohol during their partner's pregnancy. Study 3 replicated these studies with an online sample of expectant fathers. The results suggest that shifting environment office cues can signal fathering norms to men in prenatal settings, with healthier downstream behavior intentions.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216454
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Analia F Albuja
Diana T Sanchez
Shawna J Lee
Joyce Y Lee
Stacy Yadava
spellingShingle Analia F Albuja
Diana T Sanchez
Shawna J Lee
Joyce Y Lee
Stacy Yadava
The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Analia F Albuja
Diana T Sanchez
Shawna J Lee
Joyce Y Lee
Stacy Yadava
author_sort Analia F Albuja
title The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
title_short The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
title_full The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
title_fullStr The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
title_full_unstemmed The effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
title_sort effect of paternal cues in prenatal care settings on men's involvement intentions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description A father's involvement in prenatal care engenders health benefits for both mothers and children. While this information can help practitioners improve family health, low paternal involvement in prenatal care remains a challenge. The present study tested a simple, easily scalable intervention to promote father involvement by increasing men's feelings of comfort and expectations of involvement in prenatal settings through three randomized control trials. Borrowing from social psychological theory on identity safety, the three studies tested whether the inclusion of environmental cues that represent men and fatherhood in prenatal care offices influenced men's beliefs and behavioral intentions during the perinatal period. Men in studies 1 and 3 viewed online videos of purported prenatal care offices, while men in study 2 visited the office in person. Those who viewed or were immersed in a father-friendly prenatal care office believed that doctors had higher expectations of father involvement compared to treatment-as-usual. This perception predicted greater parenting confidence, comfort, and behavioral intentions to learn about the pregnancy and engage in healthy habits, such as avoiding smoking and alcohol during their partner's pregnancy. Study 3 replicated these studies with an online sample of expectant fathers. The results suggest that shifting environment office cues can signal fathering norms to men in prenatal settings, with healthier downstream behavior intentions.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216454
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