Abstract

Reproductive health, and pregnancy more specifically, is the first critical link between generations. Beginning with this first critical link, pregnancy acts as a domino, affecting the expression of genes and determining the lifespan mental and physical health and reproductive potential of offspring and, likely, of subsequent generations. Given the powerful intergenerational domino that is pregnancy, the development of innovative models to enhance reproductive health and outcomes is an invaluable public health investment. While U.S. pregnancy and birth outcomes have improved dramatically since the 1960s- including substantial progress within the past 15 years, largely catalyzed by the Healthy People initiative-group-based disparities remain. What's more, social change and medical advancements have led to an evolving window of female reproductive age. Despite becoming more common, being an older expectant mother remains a stigmatized social identity. The concept of healthcare stereotype threat (HCST) is introduced in relation to reproductive health. Stereotype threat is a situational predicament in which an individual who possesses a stigmatized social identity fears confirming negative group-based stereotypes. HCST is a healthcare-specific form of stereotype threat, arising out of stereotypes that are salient in healthcare settings. It is hypothesized that the experience of age-based reproductive HCST is an overlooked stressor affecting prenatal mental and physical health among women of advanced maternal age. The hypothesized process of age-based reproductive HCST is described; outcomes and consequences are discussed; interactions with ethnicity/race, SES, and other aspects of social identity are considered; and strategies for prevention and intervention are explored, including active and passive shifts in three areas: (1) internally, in both providers and patients; (2) in the external environment, or the physical healthcare setting itself; and (3) within interpersonal interactions that occur within healthcare settings, particularly between physicians and patients. Implications for gynecological, infertility, and obstetric care and improving the reproductive outcomes of older women are discussed.

Full Text
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