The effects of prenatal education intervention on unwed prospective adolescent fathers
- PMID: 3372288
- DOI: 10.1016/0197-0070(88)90074-5
The effects of prenatal education intervention on unwed prospective adolescent fathers
Abstract
This study assesses the impact of a prenatal education program dealing with human sexuality, pregnancy, prenatal care, labor, delivery, and infant and child care on the unwed expectant adolescent father. It also assesses the relationship between the father's knowledge in these areas and his supportive behaviors toward the adolescent mother and the expected infant. The 28 black 15-18-year-old adolescent males who volunteered to participate in the study were randomly assigned to an experimental group (n = 15) or a control group (n = 13). Each was pretested (T-1) with Form A of a 75-item prenatal questionnaire, and posttested (T-2) with Form B of the same instrument after an intervention for the experimental group, or 4 weeks after the initial assessment for the comparison group. Findings suggest significant gains in knowledge for the experimental group at T-2 versus T-1 with regard to 1) pregnancy and prenatal care, and 2) infant development and child care. The data also suggest that fathers who were more informed tended to report more supportive behaviors toward the mother and the infant.
PIP: This study assesses the impact of a prenatal education program dealing with human sexuality, pregnancy, prenatal care, labor, delivery, and infant and child care on the unwed expectant adolescent father. It also assesses the relationship between the father's knowledge in these areas and his supportive behaviors toward the adolescent mother and the expected infant. The 28 black 15-18 year old adolescent males who volunteered to participate in the study were randomly assigned to an experimental group (n=15) or a control group (n=13). Each was pretested (T-1) with Form A of a 75 item prenatal questionnairie, and posttested (T-2) with Form B of the same instrument after an intervention for the experimental group, or 4 weeks after the initial assessment for the comparison group. Findings suggest significant gains in knowledge for the experimental group at T-2 versus T-1 with regard to 1) pregnancy and prenatal care, and 2) infant development and child care. The data also suggest that fathers who were more informed tended to report more supportive behaviors toward the mother and the infant. This study's generalizability is restricted due to the nonrandom sampling technique and the small sample size. Furthermore, it is not known how long the knowledge gains were sustained. Furthermore, it is not known whether the information gained will, in fact, assist adolescent fathers in being more sensitive to the needs of the mothers and infants.
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