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. 2020 Nov 15;25(1):127–135. doi: 10.1007/s10995-020-03068-1

Table 3.

Agreement with pregnancy health-related questions, Black respondents only, baseline—Year 2

Baseline Year 1 Year 2 p
Regular check-ins with a doctor lead to healthier babies and fewer complications during labor 66.7% (20) 80.3% (49) 81.2% (69) 0.336
I know what is a safe amount of weight to gain during pregnancy 63.6% (7) 68.8% (22) 75.0% (21) 0.372
I feel confident that I can lose all the weight that I gain during my pregnancy 63.6% (7) 62.5% (20) 64.3% (18) 0.553
Health advice for one woman may not apply to other pregnant women 63.3% (19) 70.5% (43) 76.5% (65) 0.460
Exercise during pregnancy is dangerous for the babyb 56.7% (17) 63.9% (39) 61.2% (52) 0.436
During my pregnancy, I worry about what types of food I should eat because of the way it affects my babyc 50.0% (2) 72.2% (13) 58.8% (10) 0.448
Women who do not have quality prenatal care are more likely to have babies born with low birth weight 46.7% (14) 60.7% (37) 58.8% (50) 0.275
Babies born with low birthweight are more likely to have health problems as an adult 23.3% (7) 42.6% (26) 37.6% (32) 0.152
During my pregnancy, I intend on talking to my doctor or prenatal care provider about my baby’s weighta 50.0% (4) 45.5% (10) 68.2% (15) 0.203
During my pregnancy, I get/got my health-related pregnancy information from a doctord 81.8% (9) 96.9% (31) 78.6% (22) 0.087
I get my health-related pregnancy information from familyd 54.5% (6) 53.1% (17) 57.1% (16) 0.952
During my pregnancy, I get/got my health-related pregnancy information from friendsd 36.4% (4) 37.5% (12) 39.3% (11) 0.982
During my pregnancy, I get/got my health-related pregnancy information from the internetd 27.3% (3) 46.9% (15) 60.7% (17) 0.160
During my pregnancy, I get/got my health-related pregnancy information from a midwife/doulad 0.0% (0) 15.6% (5) 17.9% (5) 0.334

Responses show those who “strongly agree” or “agree” with questions

aAsked of respondents who are currently or intending on being pregnant (Baseline n = 8; Year 1 n = 22; Year 2 n = 24)

bDisagreement was measured through those who “strongly disagree” or “disagree”

cAsked of respondents who are currently pregnant (Baseline n = 4; Year 1 n = 18; Year 2 n = 17)

dAsked of respondents who are currently or previously been pregnant (Baseline n = 11; Year 1 n = 32; Year 2 n = 28)