“It is not something you like to hear, but it is something you have to know”. Community preferences for risk communication during pregnancy in the context of an emerging pathogen: a multicountry qualitative study with women in three ZIKV endemic coun
María Consuelo Miranda Montoya, Claudia Milena Hormiga Sánchez, Ester Paiva Souto, Edna Acosta Pérez, Gustavo Matta, Juliana Silva Corrêa, Marcela Daza, Gabriela Gama, Camila Pimentel, Marcela Mercado-Reyes, Angelica María Amado Niño, Elena Marbán-Castro, Luz Marina Leegstra, Olivia Manders, Priscila Cardia Petra, Lauren MaxwellIntroduction
Community values and preferences should inform risk communication during pregnancy in the context of an epidemic of an emerging pathogen, given the high levels of uncertainty in the diagnosis and the probability of an adverse outcome.
Methods
We conducted a multicountry qualitative study with 98 women from 7 sites in Brazil, Colombia and Puerto Rico to understand their preferences for learning about Zika virus test results amid high levels of uncertainty in diagnostic testing and related outcomes. We used thematic analysis with a combined deductive and inductive approach to analyse findings from the in-depth interviews.
Findings
Across sites and time periods, women wanted to learn about their test results, the risk to their pregnancy or infant and the related uncertainty as early as possible. They wanted to separate risk communication from decision-making around the following steps to give them time to consider the test results, related risks and available services.
Conclusions
Communication of the risk associated with an emerging pathogen suspected to affect pregnancy and developmental outcomes is a fraught issue. Public health authorities and healthcare providers should work closely together to understand families’ preferences for risk communication in the presence of uncertainty and develop a community-informed plan for risk communication as early as possible during an epidemic of an emerging infectious disease.