University of Illinois Chicago
Browse

Perspectives of Latina and Non-Latina White Women on Barriers and Facilitators to Exercise in Pregnancy

Download (303.17 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2022-04-01, 19:05 authored by David MarquezDavid Marquez, Eduardo BustamanteEduardo Bustamante, Beth C Bock, Glenn Markenson, Alison Tovar, Lisa Chasan-Taber
Exercise during pregnancy has been associated with reduced risk of gestational diabetes mellitus, however, twice as many women are sedentary during pregnancy as compared to when they are not pregnant. We conducted 3 focus groups among 20 pregnant Latina and non-Latina white women to identify barriers and facilitators to exercise in pregnancy to inform a gestational diabetes mellitus intervention study. Quantitative analyses of demographic data, and qualitative analyses of focus groups were conducted. Women identified physical limitations and restrictions, lack of resources, energy, and time as powerful exercise barriers. Social support, access to resources, information, proper diet, scheduling, and the weather were identified as powerful facilitators. Intervention programs designed for pregnant women should facilitate social support, provide information and resources, as well as promote short-term and long-term benefits.

History

Citation

Marquez, D. X., Bustamante, E. E., Bock, B. C., Markenson, G., Tovar, A.Chasan-Taber, L. (2009). Perspectives of Latina and Non-Latina White Women on Barriers and Facilitators to Exercise in Pregnancy. Women & Health, 49(6-7), 505-521. https://doi.org/10.1080/03630240903427114

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Language

  • en

issn

0363-0242