4.5 Article

Managing Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Pregnancy: Health Care Professionals' Involvement, Knowledge, and Decision Making

Journal

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 522-530

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ibd/izac101

Keywords

Inflammatory bowel disease; pregnancy; reproduction; knowledge

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Objective assessment shows that gastroenterology health care professionals have good knowledge of pregnancy-specific IBD, but there is inconsistency in applying this knowledge in decision-making. Further education for clinicians is needed to provide optimal standardized care for IBD in pregnancy.
Lay Summary Objective assessment of pregnancy-specific IBD knowledge among gastroenterology health care professionals is good; however, clinician application of knowledge in decision-making is less consistent. There is need for further clinician education to provide optimal standardized care for IBD in pregnancy. Background The management of pregnant women with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is complex. We aimed to assess health care professionals' (HCPs) theoretical and applied knowledge of pregnancy-related IBD issues. Methods A cross-sectional international survey was distributed to HCPs providing IBD care between October 2020 and March 2021. Knowledge was assessed using the validated Crohn's and Colitis Pregnancy Knowledge Score (CCPKnow; range, 0-17). Decision-making was assessed by free text responses to 3 clinical scenarios scored against predetermined scoring criteria (maximum score 70). Results Among 81 participants, median CCPKnow score was 16 (range, 8-17), and median total scenario score was 29 (range, 9-51). Health care professionals who treat >10 IBD patients per week (CCPKnow P = .03; scenarios P = .003) and are more regularly involved in pregnancy care (CCPKnow P = .005; scenarios P = .005) had significantly better scores. Although CCPKnow scoring was consistently high (median score >= 15) across all groups, consultants scored better than trainees and IBD nurses (P = .008 and P = .031). Median scenario scores were higher for consultants (32) and IBD nurses (33) compared with trainees (24; P = .018 and P = .022). There was a significant positive correlation between caring for greater numbers of pregnant IBD patients and higher CCPKnow (P = .001, r = .358) and scenario scores (P = .001, r = .377). There was a modest correlation between CCPKnow and scenario scores (r = .356; P < 0.001). Conclusions Despite good theoretical pregnancy-related IBD knowledge as assessed by CCPKnow, applied knowledge in the scenarios was less consistent. There is need for further HCP education and clinical experience to achieve optimal standardized care for IBD in pregnancy.

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