# Exploring online reproductive health promotion in Canada: a focus on behavioral and environmental influences from a sex and gender perspective

**Authors:** Alexandra R. Rice, Toluwanimi D. Durowaye, Anne T. M. Konkle, Karen P. Phillips

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12889-024-19159-5 · 2024-06-20

## TL;DR

This study examines how Canadian government and NGO websites promote reproductive health online, finding limited information for partners and environmental risks.

## Contribution

The study reveals gaps in online reproductive health promotion for partners and environmental hazards in Canada.

## Key findings

- Government and NGO websites provided limited reproductive health promotion for partners, focusing mainly on preconception behavior.
- Environmental hazard topics were underrepresented in online reproductive health promotion.
- Content gaps were identified for preconception and postpartum stages for women + .

## Abstract

Reproductive health promotion can enable early mitigation of behavioral and environmental risk factors associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes, while optimizing health of women + (all genders that can gestate a fetus) and babies. Although the biological and social influences of partners on pregnancy are well established, it is unknown whether online Canadian government reproductive health promotion also targets men and partners throughout the reproductive lifespan.

Reproductive health promotion, designed for the general public, was assessed in a multi-jurisdictional sample of Canadian government (federal, provincial/territorial, and municipal) and select non-governmental organization (NGO) websites. For each website, information related to environmental and behavioral influences on reproductive health (preconception, pregnancy, postpartum) was evaluated based on comprehensiveness, audience-specificity, and scientific quality.

Government and NGO websites provided sparse reproductive health promotion for partners which was generally limited to preconception behavior topics with little coverage of environmental hazard topics. For women + , environmental and behavioral influences on reproductive health were well promoted for pregnancy, with content gaps for preconception and postpartum stages.

Although it is well established that partners influence pregnancy outcomes and fetal/infant health, Canadian government website promotion of partner-specific environmental and behavioral risks was limited. Most websites across jurisdictions promoted behavioral influences on pregnancy, however gaps were apparent in the provision of health information related to environmental hazards. As all reproductive stages, including preconception and postpartum, may be susceptible to environmental and behavioral influences, online health promotion should use a sex- and gender-lens to address biological contributions to embryo, fetal and infant development, as well as contributions of partners to the physical and social environments of the home.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11188500/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11188500