Health Expectations (Jun 2020)

Exploring women’s priorities for the potential consequences of a gestational diabetes diagnosis: A pilot community jury

  • Rae Thomas,
  • Anna Mae Scott,
  • Rebecca Sims,
  • Louise Craig,
  • Leigh‐Anne Claase,
  • Julia Lowe,
  • Clare Heal,
  • Leah Hardiman,
  • Paul Glasziou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 3
pp. 593 – 602

Abstract

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Abstract Background There is no international diagnostic agreement for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). In 2014, Australia adopted a new definition and testing procedure. Since then, significantly more women have been diagnosed with GDM but with little difference in health outcomes. We explored the priorities and preferences of women potentially impacted by a GDM diagnosis. Method We recruited 15 women from the Gold Coast, Australia, to participate in a pilot community jury (CJ). Over two days, the women deliberated on the following: (a) which important consequences of a diagnosis of GDM should be considered when defining GDM?; (b) what should Australian health practitioners call the condition known as GDM? Results Eight women attended the pilot CJ, and their recommendations were a consensus. Women were surprised that the level of risk for physical harms was low but emotional harms were high. The final ranking of important consequences (high to low) was as follows: women's negative emotions; management burden of GDM; overmedicalized pregnancy; minimizing infant risks; improving lifestyle; and macrosomia. To describe the four different clinical states of GDM, the women chose three different labels. One was GDM. Conclusions The women from this pilot CJ prioritized the consequences of a diagnosis of GDM differently from clinicians. The current glucose threshold for GDM in Australia is set at a cut‐point for adverse risks including macrosomia and neonatal hyperinsulinaemia. Definitions and guideline panels often fail to ask the affected public about their values and preferences. Community voices impacted by health policies should be embedded in the decision‐making process.