Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS

Background: Mothers with HIV often face personal and environmental risks for poor maternal health behaviors and infant neglect, even when HIV transmission to the infant was prevented. Maternal-fetal attachment (MFA), the pre-birth relationship of a woman with her fetus, may be the precursor to mater...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hernandez, Julieta P.
Format: Others
Published: FIU Digital Commons 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1119
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2199&context=etd
id ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-2199
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-fiu.edu-oai-digitalcommons.fiu.edu-etd-21992018-07-19T03:33:47Z Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS Hernandez, Julieta P. Background: Mothers with HIV often face personal and environmental risks for poor maternal health behaviors and infant neglect, even when HIV transmission to the infant was prevented. Maternal-fetal attachment (MFA), the pre-birth relationship of a woman with her fetus, may be the precursor to maternal caregiving. Using the strengths perspective in social work, which embeds MFA within a socio-ecological conceptual framework, it is hypothesized that high levels of maternal-fetal attachment may protect mothers and infants against poor maternal health behaviors. Objective: To assess whether MFA together with history of substance use, living marital status, planned pregnancy status, and timing of HIV diagnosis predict three desirable maternal health behaviors (pregnancy care, adherence to prenatal antiretroviral therapy–ART, and infant’s screening clinic care) among pregnant women with HIV/AIDS. Method: Prospective observation and hypothesis-testing multivariate analyses. Over 17 consecutive months, all eligible English- or Spanish-speaking pregnant women with HIV ( n = 110) were approached in the principal obstetric and screening clinics in Miami-Dade County, Florida at 24 weeks’ gestation; 82 agreed to enroll. During three data collection periods from enrollment until 16 weeks after childbirth (range: 16 to 32 weeks), participants reported on socio-demographic and predictor variables, MFA, and pregnancy care. Measures of adherence to ART and infant care were extracted from medical records. Findings: Sociodemographic, pregnancy, and HIV disease characteristics in this sample suggest changes in the makeup of HIV-infected pregnant women parallel to the evolution of the HIV epidemic in the USA over the past two decades. The MFA model predicted maternal health behaviors for pregnancy care (R2 = .37), with MFA, marital living status, and planned pregnancy status independently contributing ( = .50, = .28, = .23, respectively). It did not predict adherence to ART medication or infant care. Relevance: These findings provide the first focused evidence of the protective role of MFA against poor maternal health behaviors among pregnant women with HIV, in the presence of adverse life circumstances. Social desirability biases in some self-report measures may limit the findings. Suggestions are made for orienting future inquiry on maternal health behaviors during childbirth toward relationship and protection. 2014-03-20T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1119 http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2199&context=etd FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations FIU Digital Commons women HIV/AIDS pregnancy maternal-fetal attachment health behaviors infant mental health Social Work
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic women
HIV/AIDS
pregnancy
maternal-fetal attachment
health behaviors
infant mental health
Social Work
spellingShingle women
HIV/AIDS
pregnancy
maternal-fetal attachment
health behaviors
infant mental health
Social Work
Hernandez, Julieta P.
Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
description Background: Mothers with HIV often face personal and environmental risks for poor maternal health behaviors and infant neglect, even when HIV transmission to the infant was prevented. Maternal-fetal attachment (MFA), the pre-birth relationship of a woman with her fetus, may be the precursor to maternal caregiving. Using the strengths perspective in social work, which embeds MFA within a socio-ecological conceptual framework, it is hypothesized that high levels of maternal-fetal attachment may protect mothers and infants against poor maternal health behaviors. Objective: To assess whether MFA together with history of substance use, living marital status, planned pregnancy status, and timing of HIV diagnosis predict three desirable maternal health behaviors (pregnancy care, adherence to prenatal antiretroviral therapy–ART, and infant’s screening clinic care) among pregnant women with HIV/AIDS. Method: Prospective observation and hypothesis-testing multivariate analyses. Over 17 consecutive months, all eligible English- or Spanish-speaking pregnant women with HIV ( n = 110) were approached in the principal obstetric and screening clinics in Miami-Dade County, Florida at 24 weeks’ gestation; 82 agreed to enroll. During three data collection periods from enrollment until 16 weeks after childbirth (range: 16 to 32 weeks), participants reported on socio-demographic and predictor variables, MFA, and pregnancy care. Measures of adherence to ART and infant care were extracted from medical records. Findings: Sociodemographic, pregnancy, and HIV disease characteristics in this sample suggest changes in the makeup of HIV-infected pregnant women parallel to the evolution of the HIV epidemic in the USA over the past two decades. The MFA model predicted maternal health behaviors for pregnancy care (R2 = .37), with MFA, marital living status, and planned pregnancy status independently contributing ( = .50, = .28, = .23, respectively). It did not predict adherence to ART medication or infant care. Relevance: These findings provide the first focused evidence of the protective role of MFA against poor maternal health behaviors among pregnant women with HIV, in the presence of adverse life circumstances. Social desirability biases in some self-report measures may limit the findings. Suggestions are made for orienting future inquiry on maternal health behaviors during childbirth toward relationship and protection.
author Hernandez, Julieta P.
author_facet Hernandez, Julieta P.
author_sort Hernandez, Julieta P.
title Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
title_short Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
title_full Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
title_fullStr Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
title_full_unstemmed Maternal-Fetal Attachment and Health Behaviors among Women with HIV/AIDS
title_sort maternal-fetal attachment and health behaviors among women with hiv/aids
publisher FIU Digital Commons
publishDate 2014
url http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1119
http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2199&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT hernandezjulietap maternalfetalattachmentandhealthbehaviorsamongwomenwithhivaids
_version_ 1718712911512207360