A Cross-Sectional Study to Assess Knowledge, Attitude, and Practices Towards COVID-19 Pandemic Amongst Pregnant Women and Healthcare Staff at a Periurban Teaching Hospital in Haryana.

Journal: Cureus
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The objective is to assess knowledge, attitude, and practices towards the COVID-19 pandemic amongst pregnant women and healthcare staff at a periurban teaching hospital in Haryana, India.

Methods:  This was a single centre questionnaire-based cross-sectional analysis regarding COVID-19 which was conducted at a periurban teaching hospital in Haryana, India, amongst 300 participants which included pregnant women and healthcare staff involved in managing them. They were assessed for demographic details and KAP scores (knowledge-14 questions, attitude-9 questions, and practice-14 questions). Analysis of data was done using IBM Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25.0.

Results: Participants in the present study had an overall adequate mean score of knowledge (22.54 ± 5.22) and were following correct practices (mean score 23.91 ± 6.72) to prevent COVID-19. The overall correlation of knowledge and practice also shows a positive correlation (0.939, p=<0.0001).

Conclusions: This study demonstrated that the majority of the pregnant women and healthcare workers involved in the management of pregnant women had adequate knowledge and a positive attitude towards tackling COVID-19. They were following correct practices and taking necessary steps for the prevention of the disease. They had adequate knowledge regarding vaccination for pregnant females.

Authors
Auditi Narayan, Atindra Narayan, Bhumika Singhal, Poonam Taneja
Relevant Conditions

COVID-19