Dietary Habits and Nutritional Knowledge of Pregnant Women: The Importance of Nutrition Education
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Dietary Habits during Pregnancy
3.2. Pregnant Women’s Knowledge of Food and Nutrition
3.3. Nutrition Education during Pregnancy
Country | Aim of the Study | Method | Sample Size | Response Rate | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | To research pregnant women’s knowledge of optimal gestational weight gain and recommended dietary approaches for weight management | Online self-completed survey for knowledge and dietary recommendations | 326 | NI/NA | Bookari et al., 2016 [58] |
Australia | To research pregnant women’s knowledge of the Australian guide to healthy eating and dietary recommendations for maintaining a healthy pregnancy | A cross-sectional study. Multidimensional online survey based on validated and existing measures. | 400 | NI/NA | Bookari et al., 2016 [61] |
Australia | To explore pregnant women’s diets in relation to the Australian guidelines for healthy eating; factors influencing adherence to the recommendations; and attitudes towards pregnancy-specific nutrition information. | A cross-sectional study using convenience sampling through an online link | 388 | NI/NA | Bookari et al., 2017 [62] |
Australia | To explore Australian women’s experiences in gaining nutrition information during pregnancy | Individual in-depth semi-structured telephone interviews | 26 | 39.8% | Bookari et al., 2017 [70] |
Australia | To explore pregnant women’s carbohydrate and standard serve size knowledge | Online survey, including a modified carbohydrate knowledge questionnaire | 186 | NI/NA | Brown et al., 2021 [56] |
Australia | To explore nutrition and physical activity behaviors of healthy and overweight pregnant women and their knowledge | Prospective observational study. Self-administered semi-quantitative survey for knowledge (items from previous validated questionnaire) and dietary behaviors | 58 | 63% | de Jersey et al., 2013 [54] |
Australia | To research pregnant iodine supplement intake and health knowledge | Self-administered questionnaire on third trimester | 200 | NI/NA | Martin & Savige 2014 [59] |
Australia | To investigate the nutrition knowledge of pregnant women, their main sources of information, and changes to their diet during pregnancy | Web-based pregnancy nutrition knowledge questionnaire (76 items). Face and content validity assessed and piloted | 114 | 69% | Lee et al., 2016 [41] |
Australia | To explore the nutrition knowledge of pregnant women and how nutrition knowledge impacts food choices | Mixed methods study design: questionnaire and interviews | 105 | NI/NA | Lee et al., 2018 [46] |
Australia | To investigate the effect of prepregnancy BMI in the association between dietary patterns and the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. | Self-administered questionnaires | 3378 | NI/NA | Schoenaker et al., 2016 [33] |
Bangladesh | To research level of pregnant nutrition knowledge among mothers attending antenatal care | Semi-structured questionnaire (15 items) | 356 | NI/NA | Azad et al., 2021 [49] |
Bangladesh | To explore the impact of nutrition education of pregnant women on birth weight in rural Bangladesh. | Nutrition education intervention (nutrition training, balanced diet, and cooking techniques) | 779 (382 IG/397 CG) | NI/NA | Chowdhury et al., 2022 [79] |
Bangladesh | To explore the effect of short-term nutrition education on weight gain in the third trimester of pregnancy, birth outcomes, and breastfeeding | Nutritional intervention | 300 (150 IG/150 CG) | 93.2% | Jahan et al., 2014 [78] |
Brazil | To assess the effectiveness of a nutritional counseling intervention concerning unprocessed and minimally processed foods rather than ultra-processed products, and the practice of physical activity to prevent excessive gestational weight gain in overweight pregnant women | Two-armed, parallel, randomized controlled trial. Nutrition intervention. Interviews | 350 (169 IG/166 CG) | 88.4% | Sartorelli et al., 2023 [82] |
Canada | To explore diet quality changes in pregnancy and maternal characteristics associated with trimester-specific diet quality | Nine 24 h dietary recalls (3 each trimester, 2 weekdays, and 1 weekend day) through a web-validated questionnaire | 79 | NI/NA | Savard et al., 2019 [38] |
Congo | To investigate the dietary knowledge and practices of a pregnant woman | Qualitative. In-depth interviews and focus group | 9 | 75% | Maykondo et al., 2022 [55] |
Croatia | To explore adherence to the Mediterranean diet | Data from the “Croatian Islands Birth Cohort Study”. Mediterranean diet questionnaire | 266 | NI/NA | Auguštin et al., 2020 [31] |
Czech Republic | To explore the level of pregnant nutritional knowledge | Anonymous self-administered paper-form questionnaire (40 items plus 5 Likert scales) | 401 | NI/NA | Papežová et al., 2023 [57] |
Egypt | To investigate the effect of the Mediterranean diet on the in-utero body fat formation and cord leptin level of newborns | Intervention among obese women with dietetic counseling based on the Mediterranean diet | 118 (57 IG/61 CG) | NI/NA | Abdou et al., 2020 [83] |
Egypt | To investigate pregnant nutritional knowledge and behavior and to identify the factors influencing both | Comparative cross-sectional study on public/private hospitals. Interview questionnaire (revised and piloted) to assess nutrition knowledge and dietary behavior | 300 | NI/NA | Nasrallah et al., 2020 [63] |
Egypt | To assess the effect of nutritional health education on changing knowledge, attitude, and practice towards healthy pregnancy | Intervention study (pre- and post-test). Individual face-to-face interviews and semi-structured questionnaire | 135 | NI/NA | Soliman et al., 2019 [84] |
Ethiopia | To research dietary practice and associated factors among pregnant women | A cross-sectional study. Interviewer-administered questionnaire | 618 | 100% | Abute et al., 2020 [68] |
Ethiopia | To investigate the effect of intensive nutrition education and counseling on nutritional status during pregnancy | Intervention. Structured questionnaires through one-to-one interviews of the participants at their homes | 645 (313 IG/332 CG) | NI/NA | Demilew et al., 2020 [76] |
Ethiopia | To assess the effect of nutrition education on nutritional knowledge and dietary practice of pregnant women | Community-based cluster randomized control trial. Nutrition education intervention | 138 | NI/NA | Diddana et al., 2018 [77] |
Ethiopia | To investigate the effect of intensive nutrition education and counseling on nutritional status during pregnancy | Two-arm parallel design cluster randomized controlled trial. Intervention: intensive nutrition education and counselling package | 374 (185 IG/189 CG) | NI/NA | Wakwoya et al., 2023 [75] |
Ethiopia | To investigate dietary practices and their determinants among pregnant women | Community-based cross-sectional study. Questionnaire pre-tested (demographics and knowledge, attitudes, and practices) | 351 | 100% | Yalewdeg et al., 2020 [53] |
Ethiopia | To explore the effect of nutrition education on the knowledge and practice of pregnant women during pregnancy | Pre- and post-intervention study | 422 pre- and 406 post-intervention | NI/NA | Zelalem, et al., 2017 [45] |
France | To evaluate nutrition concerns, beliefs, and attitudes of pregnant women and their nutrition-related information-seeking behavior | A qualitative study. Seven focus groups | 40 | NI/NA | Bianchi et al., 2016 [71] |
Greece | To explore the relationship between adherence to the Mediterranean diet before conception and the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus | A prospective cohort study. Dietary assessment with a validated FFQ, and maternal anthropometrics recorded at the antenatal visit | 743 | NI/NA | Tranidou et al., 2023 [28] |
Guadeloupe (French West Indies) | To assess the effect of adherence to the Mediterranean diet during pregnancy on fetal growth restrictions and preterm delivery. | Data from the “TIMOUN Mother–Child Cohort Study” | 728 | NI/NA | Saunders et al., 2014 [34] |
Indonesia | To explore the effects of a health and nutrition educational intervention on maternal knowledge, attitudes, and practices. | Health and nutrition education monthly. Structured questionnaires pre- and post-intervention | 252 (127 IG/125 CG) | NI/NA | Wijaya-Erhardt et al., 2014 [73] |
Iran | To explore the impact of educational programs with spousal participation on the optimal gestational weight gain | Intervention (3 groups). A: pregnant women received nutritional and physical activity education with their spouses, B: alone, and Control: did not receive | 124 | 86.2% | Asiabar et al., 2018 [64] |
Iran | To explore the effect of a nutrition educational program based on HBM compared with traditional education which recommended weight gain among pregnant women | A quasi-experimental (interventional) study. Questionnaire (83 items). Validity and reliability assessed | 110 (54 IG/56 CG) | NI/NA | Mohebi et al., 2013 [85] |
Italy | To retrospectively investigate the association between being small for gestational age, maternal adherence to the Mediterranean diet, lifestyle habits, and other risk factors during pregnancy | Data collected from medical records. Mediterranean diet adherence assessed through validated MEDI-LITE questionnaire | 100 | NI/NA | De Giuseppe et al., 2021 [29] |
Italy | To investigate how a greater or lesser adherence to the Mediterranean diet influences specific parameters of mother and newborn | Anonymous online semi-structured questionnaire (79 questions) including a validated 14-item MEDAS | 501 | NI/NA | Di Renzo et al., 2022 [30] |
Japan | To investigate the effect of adherence to the Mediterranean diet in pregnancy on the allergies of the offspring | Data collected on the Mediterranean diet during pregnancy and the incidence of allergies in offspring from the “Japan Environment and Children’s Study” | 46,532 mother-newborn pairs | NI/NA | Nakano et al., 2023 [36] |
Jordan | To explore the effect of health education on pregnant dietary knowledge levels and practices | Intervention. Structured questionnaire to assess dietary knowledge and practices before and after the intervention | 195 (95 GI/100 CG) | 92.7% | Abu-Baker et al., 2021 [47] |
Kenya | To evaluate the effectiveness of home-based maternal nutritional counseling on nutritional outcomes, morbidity, breastfeeding, and infant feeding practices | Nutritional counselling intervention. Semi-structured questionnaires | 1001 (480 IG/521 CG) | NI/NA | Nyamasege et al., 2019 [80] |
Lebanon | To investigate the impact of nutrition education on the nutrition knowledge of pregnant women | Intervention. Pre- and post-nutrition knowledge test (41 items; true/false) | 91 | NI/NA | Chehade et al., 2023 [48] |
Malawi | To investigate the effects of supplementary nutrition education and dietary counseling compared with routine antenatal care on pregnant nutrition knowledge, perceptions, and dietary habits | Intervention | 195 (92 IG/103 CG) | NI/NA | Katenga-Kaunda et al., 2020 [86] |
Malaysia | To research nutritional knowledge, attitude, and practice during pregnancy and the relationship with socio-demographic characteristics | A cross-sectional study. Questionnaire to assess knowledge (19 items), attitudes (14 items), and practices (13 items) | 320 | NI/NA | Ikhsan et al., 2018 [52] |
Norway | To investigate experiences with nutrition-related information during routine antenatal care among women of different ethnical backgrounds | Individual interviews twice during pregnancy. Interviews followed semi-structured guides (pilot-tested). | 17 | NI/NA | Garnweidner et al., 2013 [72] |
Pakistan | To explore pregnant nutritional knowledge about food intake during pregnancy and associations between education level and nutritional knowledge | A cross-sectional study | 372 | NI/NA | Akhtar et al., 2020 [50] |
Pakistan | To research the effects of nutrition education intervention on dietary practices and the nutritional status of pregnant women | Quasi-experimental study. Intervention (two months). Pre- and post-counselling interviews | 194 | NI/NA | Kaleem et al., 2020 [81] |
Pakistan | To explore pregnant nutritional knowledge and practices | Hospital-based cross-sectional study. Questionnaire | 120 | NI/NA | Razzaq et al., 2018 [51] |
Poland | To investigate the nutritional behavior of pregnant women attending antenatal classes in comparison to non-attendees regarding the frequency of consumption of the main types of food | Questionnaire survey (28 multiple-choice items) | 200 | NI/NA | Lugowska et al., 2020 [40] |
Portugal | To assess predictors of adherence to the Mediterranean diet from the first to second trimester of pregnancy | Prospective study. Socio-demographic and lifestyle characteristics assessed through a questionnaire. Food consumption assessed with a three-day food diary during first and second trimesters. | 102 | 97.8% | Abreu et al., 2015 [32] |
Romania | To assess the relationship between nutritional knowledge and the use of folic acid, iron, and multivitamin supplements during pregnancy, and the influence of socio-demographic factors and prenatal care | A cross-sectional study. Nutritional knowledge assessed using a standardized questionnaire (26 items) revised and validated in an interview | 400 | 97.5% | Popa et al., 2013 [69] |
Spain | To research the effect of adherence to a MedDiet pattern after 12 gestational weeks on maternal–fetal outcomes. | Post hoc analysis of the “St. Carlos Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Prevention Study” | 874 | 58.2% | Assaf-Balut et al., 2018 [23] |
Spain | To explore the relationship between maternal MedDiet adherence during pregnancy, anthropometric measures, and small-for-gestational-age at birth | A longitudinal population-based study analyzing data from healthy pregnant women from the ECLIPSES trial. Dietary assessment through FFQ | 614 mother-newborn pairs | NI/NA | Díaz-López et al., 2022 [26] |
Spain | To evaluate adherence to the Mediterranean diet and dietary guidelines, changes in diet during pregnancy and post-partum, and maternal factors associated with food consumption | Longitudinal study: clinical history, anthropometric measurements, lifestyle habits, and nutrition assessed at first, second, third trimester, and post-partum by interview using validated FFQ | Week 12: 793; week 24: 547; week 36: 465; postpartum: 418 | NI/NA | Jardí et al., 2019 [21] |
Spain | To evaluate whether adherence to the MedDiet during pregnancy induces health benefits for the offspring during the first two years of life | Nutritional intervention. Adherence to a healthy lifestyle assessed with the “Diabetes Nutrition and Complication Trial” questionnaire. Adherence to MedDiet assessed with MEDAS | 703 mother-children (365 CG/338 IG) | 80.4% | Melero et al., 2020 [27] |
Spain | To evaluate adherence to the Mediterranean diet among pregnant women; levels of adherence and its influence on the anthropometric development of the newborn | Interview after birth, self-administered shorter Spanish version of “Kidmed” questionnaire, and clinical history review of mothers and newborns | 492 | 85% | Peraita-Costa et al., 2018 [24] |
Spain | To investigate maternal Mediterranean diet pattern adherence during pregnancy and its association with small-for-gestational-age and preterm birth | Two-phase retrospective population-based study of maternal dietary habits during pregnancy and their effect on newborn size and prematurity. Adherence to the Mediterranean diet assessed with the Spanish version of the Kidmed index | 1118 | 77.3% | Peraita-Costa et al., 2021 [19] |
Spain | To investigate the adherence to the Mediterranean diet of pregnant women from the NELA cohort | Food intake collected at 20 weeks of gestation using a validated FFQ | 738 | 54% | Suárez-Martínez et al., 2021 [22] |
Spain | To investigate the adherence to the Mediterranean diet and its association with newborn weight | A retrospective cross-sectional study. Anthropometric characteristics assessed at the beginning and the end of pregnancy; the other variables were assessed through a MEDAS questionnaire | 218 | NI/NA | Tomaino et al., 2020 [25] |
Spain | To investigate the impact of the Mediterranean diet on pregnant women’s weight gain and obesity | A cross-sectional study | 170 | NI/NA | Silva del Valle et al., 2013 [20] |
Spain | To research characteristics of maternal diet and lifestyle in early pregnancy and its association with GDM development | Questionnaire on nutritional knowledge, lifestyle, and dietary habits. Biochemical, obstetrics, and perinatal data monitored during pregnancy | 103 | NI/NA | Yuste-Gómez et al., 2022 [39] |
Tanzania | To explore the micronutrient knowledge and dietary practices of Maasai pregnant women | Mixed-method study. Validated questionnaire and focus group | 140 | 100% | Mshanga et al., 2020 [60] |
Turkey | To evaluate the effect of pregnant nutrition education on nutritional knowledge levels | Nutrition education intervention. Face-to-face interviews for demographics and sources of nutritional knowledge. Nutritional knowledge questionnaire (25 items) | 743 | NI/NA | Aktaç et al., 2018 [67] |
Turkey | To assess pregnant nutritional habits and healthy nutrition knowledge levels | General knowledge nutrition questionnaire | 338 | NI/NA | Aynaci et al., 2019 [66] |
Uganda | To explore the maternal nutrition education offered by midwives to women attending an antenatal clinic | Six in-depth interviews with midwives, observation of six group education sessions, and twelve one-on-one interactions between midwives and pregnant women | 6 | NI/NA | Nankumbi et al., 2018 [74] |
UK | To explore whether a Mediterranean diet reduces adverse pregnancy outcomes in high-risk women | A multicenter randomized trial. Intervention | 1252 (593 IG/612 CG) | NI/NA | Al Wattar et al., 2019 [37] |
UK | To explore women’s physical activity levels, diet, and gestational weight gain, and their experiences and motivations of behavior change | Cross-sectional data collected during a longitudinal cohort study. Dietary instrument for nutrition education (brief version), the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (short form), and open questions on perceptions of behavior change | 193 | NI/NA | Swift et al., 2017 [43] |
USA | To investigate the effectiveness of an educational intervention on pregnant women’s nutritional knowledge | A quasi-experimental study. Intervention. Pre- and post-nutrition knowledge questionnaire (42 items) | 27 | NI/NA | Blondin et al., 2018 [42] |
USA | To investigate pregnant women’s knowledge about gestational weight gain and how healthy eating behaviors impact it | Semi-structured individual interviews and focus group interviews | 30 | 79% | Downs et al., 2014 [65] |
USA | To explore the association between Mediterranean diet patterns around the time of conception and a lower risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes | Prospective, multicenter, cohort study. Diet assessment through FFQ | 7798 | NI/NA | Makarem et al., 2022 [35] |
USA | To explore individual viewpoints of pregnant adolescents to facilitate the development of a nutrition intervention | A qualitative study using focus groups | 14 | NI/NA | Wise et al., 2015 [44] |
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Olloqui-Mundet, M.J.; Cavia, M.d.M.; Alonso-Torre, S.R.; Carrillo, C. Dietary Habits and Nutritional Knowledge of Pregnant Women: The Importance of Nutrition Education. Foods 2024, 13, 3189. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods13193189
Olloqui-Mundet MJ, Cavia MdM, Alonso-Torre SR, Carrillo C. Dietary Habits and Nutritional Knowledge of Pregnant Women: The Importance of Nutrition Education. Foods. 2024; 13(19):3189. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods13193189
Chicago/Turabian StyleOlloqui-Mundet, María Josefa, María del Mar Cavia, Sara R. Alonso-Torre, and Celia Carrillo. 2024. "Dietary Habits and Nutritional Knowledge of Pregnant Women: The Importance of Nutrition Education" Foods 13, no. 19: 3189. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods13193189
APA StyleOlloqui-Mundet, M. J., Cavia, M. d. M., Alonso-Torre, S. R., & Carrillo, C. (2024). Dietary Habits and Nutritional Knowledge of Pregnant Women: The Importance of Nutrition Education. Foods, 13(19), 3189. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods13193189