Study protocol: Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study)

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Study protocol : Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study). / Moseholm, Ellen; Fetters, Micheal D.; Aho, Inka; Mellgren, Aasa; Johansen, Isik S.; Storgaard, Merete; Pedersen, Gitte; Katzenstein, Terese L.; Weis, Nina.

I: BMJ Open, Bind 9, Nr. 10, e027761, 2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Moseholm, E, Fetters, MD, Aho, I, Mellgren, A, Johansen, IS, Storgaard, M, Pedersen, G, Katzenstein, TL & Weis, N 2019, 'Study protocol: Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study)', BMJ Open, bind 9, nr. 10, e027761. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761

APA

Moseholm, E., Fetters, M. D., Aho, I., Mellgren, A., Johansen, I. S., Storgaard, M., Pedersen, G., Katzenstein, T. L., & Weis, N. (2019). Study protocol: Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study). BMJ Open, 9(10), [e027761]. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761

Vancouver

Moseholm E, Fetters MD, Aho I, Mellgren A, Johansen IS, Storgaard M o.a. Study protocol: Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study). BMJ Open. 2019;9(10). e027761. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761

Author

Moseholm, Ellen ; Fetters, Micheal D. ; Aho, Inka ; Mellgren, Aasa ; Johansen, Isik S. ; Storgaard, Merete ; Pedersen, Gitte ; Katzenstein, Terese L. ; Weis, Nina. / Study protocol : Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study). I: BMJ Open. 2019 ; Bind 9, Nr. 10.

Bibtex

@article{24685c02f0b04e14872f44e9036fc5cd,
title = "Study protocol: Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study)",
abstract = "Introduction The success of combination antiretroviral therapy has decreased the risk of perinatal HIV transmission and normalised pregnancy in women living with HIV (WLWH). Despite these advances, WLWH still face complex medical and psychosocial issues during pregnancy and postpartum, and there is a gap of knowledge on the experiences of becoming and being a mother living with HIV in today's context. The overall aim of this study is to investigate psychosocial outcomes and experiences of WLWH in Scandinavia during pregnancy and early motherhood. Methods and analysis This is a multicentre longitudinal convergent mixed methods study consisting of a quantitative survey study, a qualitative interview study and a mixed methods analysis. The survey study aims to examine psychosocial outcomes of WLWH across the pregnancy - postpartum trajectory. Participants are pregnant WLWH living in Scandinavia. Two control groups of HIV-negative pregnant women and non-pregnant WLWH are also included. Data is collected in the third trimester, 3 and 6 months postpartum using standardised questionnaires. Statistical analysis will assess changes over time and identify predictors of adverse outcomes. The interview study seeks to understand experiences of pregnancy and becoming a mother while living with HIV. Pregnant WLWH who are enrolled in the survey study will be asked to participate in individual interviews in the third trimester and 6 months postpartum. Data will be analysed using narrative analysis. The survey and interview results will be merged in a mixed methods analysis to assess confirmation, expansion or discordance between the data sets. Ethics and dissemination Approval from the Danish Data Protection Agency (VD-2018-253), and the Finnish and Swedish Ethics Committees have been obtained (HUS/1330/2019 and Dnr: 2019-04451, respectively). Study results will be disseminated to patient organisations, through publications in peer-reviewed journals and at scientific conferences.",
keywords = "depression, HIV, mixed methods, motherhood, pregnancy, stigma",
author = "Ellen Moseholm and Fetters, {Micheal D.} and Inka Aho and Aasa Mellgren and Johansen, {Isik S.} and Merete Storgaard and Gitte Pedersen and Katzenstein, {Terese L.} and Nina Weis",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "BMJ Open",
issn = "2044-6055",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Study protocol

T2 - Becoming and being a mother living with HIV - A multicentre longitudinal mixed methods study among pregnant women living with HIV, non-pregnant women living with HIV and pregnant women not living with HIV in a high-income setting (the 2B MOM study)

AU - Moseholm, Ellen

AU - Fetters, Micheal D.

AU - Aho, Inka

AU - Mellgren, Aasa

AU - Johansen, Isik S.

AU - Storgaard, Merete

AU - Pedersen, Gitte

AU - Katzenstein, Terese L.

AU - Weis, Nina

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Introduction The success of combination antiretroviral therapy has decreased the risk of perinatal HIV transmission and normalised pregnancy in women living with HIV (WLWH). Despite these advances, WLWH still face complex medical and psychosocial issues during pregnancy and postpartum, and there is a gap of knowledge on the experiences of becoming and being a mother living with HIV in today's context. The overall aim of this study is to investigate psychosocial outcomes and experiences of WLWH in Scandinavia during pregnancy and early motherhood. Methods and analysis This is a multicentre longitudinal convergent mixed methods study consisting of a quantitative survey study, a qualitative interview study and a mixed methods analysis. The survey study aims to examine psychosocial outcomes of WLWH across the pregnancy - postpartum trajectory. Participants are pregnant WLWH living in Scandinavia. Two control groups of HIV-negative pregnant women and non-pregnant WLWH are also included. Data is collected in the third trimester, 3 and 6 months postpartum using standardised questionnaires. Statistical analysis will assess changes over time and identify predictors of adverse outcomes. The interview study seeks to understand experiences of pregnancy and becoming a mother while living with HIV. Pregnant WLWH who are enrolled in the survey study will be asked to participate in individual interviews in the third trimester and 6 months postpartum. Data will be analysed using narrative analysis. The survey and interview results will be merged in a mixed methods analysis to assess confirmation, expansion or discordance between the data sets. Ethics and dissemination Approval from the Danish Data Protection Agency (VD-2018-253), and the Finnish and Swedish Ethics Committees have been obtained (HUS/1330/2019 and Dnr: 2019-04451, respectively). Study results will be disseminated to patient organisations, through publications in peer-reviewed journals and at scientific conferences.

AB - Introduction The success of combination antiretroviral therapy has decreased the risk of perinatal HIV transmission and normalised pregnancy in women living with HIV (WLWH). Despite these advances, WLWH still face complex medical and psychosocial issues during pregnancy and postpartum, and there is a gap of knowledge on the experiences of becoming and being a mother living with HIV in today's context. The overall aim of this study is to investigate psychosocial outcomes and experiences of WLWH in Scandinavia during pregnancy and early motherhood. Methods and analysis This is a multicentre longitudinal convergent mixed methods study consisting of a quantitative survey study, a qualitative interview study and a mixed methods analysis. The survey study aims to examine psychosocial outcomes of WLWH across the pregnancy - postpartum trajectory. Participants are pregnant WLWH living in Scandinavia. Two control groups of HIV-negative pregnant women and non-pregnant WLWH are also included. Data is collected in the third trimester, 3 and 6 months postpartum using standardised questionnaires. Statistical analysis will assess changes over time and identify predictors of adverse outcomes. The interview study seeks to understand experiences of pregnancy and becoming a mother while living with HIV. Pregnant WLWH who are enrolled in the survey study will be asked to participate in individual interviews in the third trimester and 6 months postpartum. Data will be analysed using narrative analysis. The survey and interview results will be merged in a mixed methods analysis to assess confirmation, expansion or discordance between the data sets. Ethics and dissemination Approval from the Danish Data Protection Agency (VD-2018-253), and the Finnish and Swedish Ethics Committees have been obtained (HUS/1330/2019 and Dnr: 2019-04451, respectively). Study results will be disseminated to patient organisations, through publications in peer-reviewed journals and at scientific conferences.

KW - depression

KW - HIV

KW - mixed methods

KW - motherhood

KW - pregnancy

KW - stigma

U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761

DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027761

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31619417

AN - SCOPUS:85073414928

VL - 9

JO - BMJ Open

JF - BMJ Open

SN - 2044-6055

IS - 10

M1 - e027761

ER -

ID: 232016082