I have a keen interest in nutrition and its impact on
health of the population, especially women, which arose from my own experience
in relation to food behaviours and weight influences. I am pursuing a PhD in Health
Sciences having graduated with a first class Masters in Public Health-
International Health from the University of Nottingham 2009/2010.
While in Uganda, I worked in the Northern districts
transitioning from a 20-year long civil conflict, where I conducted project
work focused at increasing access for women to HIV testing during pregnancy
and linkage to treatment, as well as enhancing access for children under five with
diarrhoea to oral rehydration therapy and nutritional supplements for
malnourished children.
My PhD study, funded by the University of Hull Studentship,
explores women’s eating behaviours and weight status in pregnancy. The rationale
for the study results from gaps in the literature regarding interventions and
research regarding maternal weight following pregnancy. Women naturally gain
weight in pregnancy which may persist into the postpartum period and
subsequently lead to maternal obesity later in life.
Whilst other factors for postpartum weight gain have been
identified, what remains less clear is whether there is an alteration of food
behaviours by women in pregnancy, which persists into the postpartum period,
impacting not only on gestational weight gain but on postpartum weight
retention and potentially on family food habits and practices.
Therefore this project seeks to explore the interrelations of
food behaviours with weight status of pregnant women, comparing them with those
never pregnant and postpartum, to understand women’s experiences of body image
and societal influences on their perinatal engagement with food. The study is
qualitative using interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) methodology and
drawing on aspects of discourse analysis.
Results from the study will be used to inform development
of interventions to address the growing problem of maternal obesity both in the
UK and internationally.
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteI saw a poster asking for volunteers for your study, and was wondering if you still needed participants?
I didn't have enough time to copy the details from the poster I saw in a cafe.
If you'd like to contact me my email is lucymurphyroutledge (at) gmail .com.