Elsevier

Social Science & Medicine

Volume 50, Issue 4, February 2000, Pages 567-582
Social Science & Medicine

Continuity and change in women’s weight orientations and lifestyle practices through pregnancy and the postpartum period: the influence of life course trajectories and transitional events

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-9536(99)00314-7Get rights and content
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Abstract

The life course perspective offers a framework for understanding continuity and change in health and health practices. Body weight, and the diet and physical activity strategies used to manage weight in pregnancy and the postpartum period, are a focus of much study because of an association between parity and body weight. The motherhood transition offers an opportunity to study weight concerns and weight management strategies during a period of weight fluctuation that is part of a life transition for many women. Our aim was to develop an in-depth understanding of women’s experiences of pregnancy and postpartum weight changes, the strategies that women used to deal with weight changes, and patterns in their attitudes and strategies across pregnancy and the postpartum period. A longitudinal design, using multiple, in-depth, qualitative interviews with 36 women from pregnancy through the postpartum period, was chosen for data collection. Prepregnancy orientations towards body weight emerged as the primary influence on women’s pregnancy and postpartum attitudes towards weight, on patterns of physical activity and diet, and on postpartum weight outcomes among most study participants. Four different trajectories (“relaxed maintenance”, “exercise”, “determined”, and “unhurried”), characterized by differences in women’s orientations towards their body weight and their diet and physical activity patterns across pregnancy and the postpartum period, emerged from the data. Only a few women diverged from prepregnancy trajectories in weight orientation and diet and physical activity patterns postpartum. Delayed resumption of prepregnancy physical activity and dietary patterns contributed to postpartum weight retention for a subset of “exercisers”. Stress and age- or role-related changes in perspective interrupted the continuity of weight orientations and behavioral patterns for three other women. These findings highlight the direction and momentum provided by trajectories in health attitudes and strategies as processes shaping responses to a life transition.

Keywords

Postpartum
Life course
Exercise
Diet
Weight
Women
Body image

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