DOI: 10.3390/ijerph23070831 ISSN: 1660-4601

Weather Information Seeking and Heat-Health Protective Actions During Pregnancy: An Exploratory Study

Lisa K. Zottarelli, Robyn Stassen, Yejin Heo, Madeline Navarrete, Shamshad Khan, Thankam Sunil, Andrea Shields

Extreme heat poses health risks during pregnancy, but little is known about how pregnant individuals seek weather information to engage in heat-health protective actions. This study examined associations between routine and event-driven weather information seeking and both routine physiological heat-health protective actions (i.e., limiting sun exposure, staying hydrated, and spending time in air conditioning) and higher-threshold adaptive behaviors (i.e., changing plans due to heat). A cross-sectional survey of 195 pregnant individuals in Bexar County, TX, USA, was conducted during the summer and fall of 2024. Descriptive and nonparametric analyses explored relationships across trimesters. Participants demonstrated high routine weather information seeking and greater weather information needs since becoming pregnant. Over half (51.3%) reported increased weather information seeking during excessive heat, with lower increases during the first trimester. During extreme heat, most respondents increased heat-health protective actions. Increased information needs during pregnancy were significantly related to heat-health protective actions. Routine weather checking showed weak or inverse relationships with changing plans, suggesting that routine weather awareness alone may not prompt changing plans. Trimester patterns indicated heightened information seeking and protective actions later in pregnancy. Findings highlight the importance of pregnancy-specific heat risk communication with trimester-specific guidance provided in clinical counseling, public health messaging, and meteorological communication.

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