Mental Representations of Pregnant Nulliparous Women Having No Sex Preference

1996 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 464-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques D. Marleau ◽  
Jean-François Saucier ◽  
Odette Bernazzani ◽  
François Borgeat ◽  
Hélène David

The objective was to elicit the mental representations about the sex of the future child of 89 nulliparous pregnant women who declared having no sex preference, using the Kelly s Repertory Grid. Analyses showed that 67% of these women had no explicit and clear representation about the sex of their first child. These data suggest that these pregnant women seemed really to have no sex preference.

1997 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 273-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacques D. Marleau ◽  
Jean-François Saucier ◽  
François Borgeat ◽  
Odette Bernazzani ◽  
Hélène David

The objective was to obtain the mental representations concerning the sex of the child of 125 nulliparous third- and fourth-mo. pregnant women who wished a boy or a girl, using Kelly's Repertory Grid. Our data indicate that the grid's average of the two groups of women is significantly different from 3 (the neutral point).


Author(s):  
A. V. Balakireva ◽  
E. K. Baklushina ◽  
L. A. Zhdanova ◽  
O. S. Runova ◽  
I. E. Boboshko ◽  
...  

There are presented results of the organizational experiment on the introduction to the work of women’s consultations, polyclinics of the General health network and children’s policlinics of the complex of medical and organizational measures aimed at the improvement of preventive counselling pregnant women in the system of antenatal health care for children. It includes a program of information support for women and a form of the documented assignment for output recommendations. The introduction of this complex excluded the duplication of output recommendations for patients and provided the competent and timely information sharing to pregnant women about the influence of their lifestyle on the formation of the health of the future child. The effectiveness of implementation was testified by the increased awareness of patients and the increasing importance of information on these issues, as well as high satisfaction of its obtaining from specialists. A significant reduction in the frequency of disturbances in the lifestyle of pregnant women was established to provide the creation of favorable conditions for the formation of the health of the future child.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Anjelika Hasan

Sex preference of offspring is very strong in Bangladesh associated with socioeconomic and cultural reasons and as a result, parents desperately want to get firstborn boy. Many couples are distressed, if they are unable to produce the first male offspring. Under the circumstances, if they detect the first child is girl at the embryonic stage, in many cases, the parents are interested to terminate the pregnancy through induced abortion in the shade of menstrual regulation (MR). The focus of this paper is to examine to what extent the pregnant women terminate their fetus through induced abortion under the shade of Menstrual Regulation (MR) in avoiding the girl child.


Author(s):  
Hale Göksever Çelik ◽  
Engin Çelik ◽  
Gökhan Yıldırım

Background: Digital cervical evaluation has been used to determine the likelihood of vaginal delivery which is considered by many women to be non-tolerable. Recently, transperineal ultrasound allowing direct visualization of the fetal skull has been using for the prediction of labor route. Authors aimed to study whether measurements on transperineal ultrasound are predictive for vaginal delivery in pregnant women induced with dinoprostone at 40.0-42.0 gestational weeks.Methods: A total of 55 pregnant women at 40.0-42.0 gestational weeks were enrolled in this prospective observational study. All participated women were examined before the induction with dinoprostone to measure the head-perineum distance (HPD), the head-pubis distance and the angle of progression of fetal head (AOP).Results: The greater AOP, the shorter HPD and the head-pubis distance were associated with vaginal delivery in the nulliparous women. The HPD and the head-pubis distance were shorter, whereas the AOP was greater in the multiparous women giving birth by vaginal route.Conclusions: Transperineal ultrasound can be applied at the beginning of labor to predict whether vaginal delivery will occur or not. As shown in our study, the pregnant women with shorter HPD and wider AOP might have a high possibility to achieve vaginal delivery.


1971 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Uddenberg ◽  
P.-E. Almgren ◽  
Å. Nilsson

One hundred and fifty-two randomly selected pregnant women were examined and followed up by interviews and psychological tests during pregnancy and after parturition. The present paper is focused upon factors which determine the woman's preference for the sex of her expected child. It was shown that women who already have one or more children generally wanted the expected child to be of the opposite sex to her youngest child. Thus, the main part of the study was limited to eighty-one nulliparous women.Associations were found between the woman's preference for the sex of the child and several factors such as the sex of her own siblings and her position among them, her education, intelligence and degree of field-dependence indicating immaturity and lack of autonomy.Several of the findings presented refute the common supposition that nulliparous women generally want to give birth to a son, and that the arrival of a son is more satisfactory. Women wishing for a son were found to be somewhat more field-dependent than other women and somewhat more often reported that they had experienced a range of mental symptoms before the current pregnancy. Women wishing for a boy also reported more mental symptoms during the post-partum period. Moreover, those women who gave birth to a son reperted more symptoms at this time than those who gave birth to a daughter, and paradoxically the most affected were those who had wished for a son and had had their wishes fulfilled. The arrival of a daughter therefore seems to be equally satisfactory to the mother, at least as measured by the criteria used in this investigation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Negin Jaafar ◽  
Lars Henning Pedersen ◽  
Olav Bjørn Petersen ◽  
Lone Hvidman

AbstractIntroductionQuickening, the first sensation of fetal movements, is an important milestone for pregnant women. Information on the expected gestational age at quickening may reduce anxiety and prevent delayed detection of intrauterine demise but the available data are from the 1980s before the emergence of modern ultrasound techniques.Materials and methodsProspective observational study on nulliparous women blinded for placental location in two hospitals in Denmark. The pregnant women were enrolled at the time of nuchal translucency scan, placental location was determined at time of second trimester scanning.. The women were blinded to placenta location before time of quickening. Time of quickening were reported by 122 women, 65 with an anterior and 57 with a posterior placenta. Thirteen women had a BMI >30 (10.7%).ResultsThe mean gestational age for quickening was 19 + 0 weeks for nulliparous women. The timing depended on placental site; women with an anterior placenta experienced quickening 6.4 days later than the women with a posterior placenta. BMI > 30 was associated with a later time of quickening.ConclusionsAnterior placental location is associated with delay in experience of fetal movements of 6.4 days and this may further be delayed in women with a BMI>30.


2019 ◽  
Vol 122 (8) ◽  
pp. 910-918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhodi E. Bulloch ◽  
Lesley M. E. McCowan ◽  
John M. D. Thompson ◽  
Lisa A. Houghton ◽  
Clare R. Wall

AbstractFolic acid (FA) supplementation is recommended in the periconceptional period, for the prevention of neural tube defects. Limited data are available on the folate status of New Zealand (NZ) pregnant women and its association with FA supplementation intake. Objectives were to examine the relationship between plasma folate (PF) and reported FA supplement use at 15 weeks’ gestation and to explore socio-demographic and lifestyle factors associated with PF. We used data and blood samples from NZ participants of the Screening for Pregnancy Endpoints cohort study. Healthy nulliparous women with singleton pregnancy (n 1921) were interviewed and blood samples collected. PF was analysed via microbiological assay. Of the participants, 73 % reported taking an FA supplement at 15 weeks’ gestation – of these, 79 % were taking FA as part of/alongside a multivitamin supplement. Of FA supplement users, 56 % reported consuming a daily dose of ≥800 μg; 39 % reported taking less than 400 µg/d. Mean PF was significantly higher in women reporting FA supplementation (54·6 (se 1·5) nmol/l) v. no FA supplementation (35·1 (se 1·6) nmol/l) (P<0·0001). Reported daily FA supplement dose and PF were significantly positively correlated (r 0·41; P<0·05). Younger maternal age, Pacific and Maori ethnicity and obesity were negatively associated with PF levels; vegetarianism was positively associated with PF. Reported FA supplement dose was significantly associated with PF after adjustment for socio-demographic, lifestyle confounders and multivitamin intake. The relationship observed between FA supplementation and PF demonstrates that self-reported intake is a reliable proxy for FA supplement use in this study population.


BMJ Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. e037751
Author(s):  
Charline Bertholdt ◽  
Gabriela Hossu ◽  
Claire Banasiak ◽  
Marine Beaumont ◽  
Olivier Morel

IntroductionPre-eclampsia (PE) and intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) are two major pregnancy complications, related to chronic uteroplacental hypoperfusion. Nowadays, there is no screening or diagnostic test for uteroplacental vascularisation deficiency in pregnant women. Since 2004, 3 three-imensional power Doppler (3DPD) angiography has been used for the evaluation of uteroplacental vascularisation and three vascular indices are usually calculated: Vascularisation Index (VI), Flow Index (FI) and vascularisation-FI (VFI). A high intraobserver and interobserver reproducibility and a potential interest for placental function study were reported by our team and others.The main objective of our study is to determine differences in 3DPD indices at first trimester between pregnancies defined at their outcome as uncomplicated pregnancy, PE (mild and severe) and IUGR in nulliparous women.Methods and analysisThis is a national multicentre prospective cohort study conducted in four French maternity units. We expect to include 2200 women in a period of 36 months. The nulliparous pregnant women will be recruited during their first trimester consultation (11–13+6 gestation week (GW)).The 3DPD and uterine artery Doppler acquisition will be included in the current routine 11–13+6 GW ultrasound. Also, additional blood samples will be taken for biomarker analysis (PAPP-A and P1GF) and biological collection. Uteroplacental VIs (FI and VFI) will be measured. For each subgroup (uncomplicated pregnancy, PE and IUGR), mean values in 3DPD indices will be computed and compared using a pairwise t test with a Bonferroni correction p value adjustment.Ethics and disseminationThe study was approved by the French Ethics Committee, the Comité de Protection des Personnes SUD MEDITERRANEE IV on 13 February 2018 with reference number 17 12 03. The results of this study will be published in a peer-reviewed journal and will be presented at relevant conferences.Trial registration numberNCT03342014; Pre-results. PHRCN-16-0567.


2020 ◽  
pp. 014177892095867
Author(s):  
Marie Thompson

In this article, I explore the auditory technopolitics of prenatal sound systems, asking what kinds of futures, listeners and temporalities they seek to produce. With patents for prenatal audio apparatus dating back to the late 1980s, there are now a range of devices available to expectant parents. These sound technologies offer multiple benefits: from soothing away stress to increasing the efficiency of ultrasonic scans. However, one common point of emphasis is their capacity to accelerate foetal ‘learning’ and cognitive development. Taking as exemplary the Babypod and BabyPlus devices, I argue that prenatal sound systems make audible a particular figuration of pregnancy and gestational labour that combines divergent notions of responsibility and passivity. Contra the equation of neoliberalism with self-control and individualism, I argue that prenatal sound systems amplify neoliberal capitalism’s elision of personal, maternal and familial responsibility. As reproductive sound technologies, prenatal sound systems facilitate maternal–familial investment in the pre-born as future-child. Consequently, financialised notions of inheritance are substituted for biological inheritance. Drawing attention to the common rhetorical figuration of the sonic as womb-like, furthermore, I argue that prenatal sound systems exemplify what I refer to as uterine audiophilia. By treating the womb as ‘the perfect classroom’, prenatal sound systems imply an intense maternal obligation to invest in and impress upon the future-child, while also envisioning the pregnant person’s body as an occupied, resonant space. Cohering with a fidelity discourse that posits the reproductive medium as passive container and a source of noise that is to be overcome, uterine audiophilia relies upon politically regressive conceptualisations of pregnancy. I thus argue that these devices mark the hitherto under-theorised convergence of auditory culture, technology and reproductive politics.


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