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Attitudes, Assumptions, and Beliefs of Obstetric Care Clinicians Regarding Perinatal Care of Women With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Attitudes, Assumptions, and Beliefs of Obstetric Care Clinicians Regarding Perinatal Care of Women With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

Lauren D Smith, Robyn M Powell, Aishwarya Khanna, Tiffany A Moore Simas and Monika Mitra
American journal on intellectual and developmental disabilities, Vol.130(4), pp.294-308
07/01/2025
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10192/74639
PMID: 40562399

Abstract

Adult Attitude of Health Personnel Developmental Disabilities - psychology Female Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Humans Intellectual Disability - psychology Middle Aged Obstetrics Perinatal Care Qualitative Research Young Adult Pregnancy
This study examines clinician attitudes, beliefs, and assumptions regarding perinatal care of women with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) from the perspectives of both clinicians and women with IDD. We conducted semistructured individual interviews with women (n = 16) and individual interviews and one focus group with clinicians (n = 17). Data were analyzed using a content analysis approach. Analysis revealed both supportive and restrictive categories. Supportive: (a) accommodating needs, (b) respecting autonomy, and (c) supporting motherhood. Restrictive: (a) unwillingness to accommodate, (b) assumptions about decision-making capacity, (c) questioning parenting abilities, and (d) biased contraception and sterilization practices. Clinician training to address attitudes, beliefs, and assumptions is needed to improve perinatal care for women with IDD.

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