# Are smartphones a tool to cope with the fear of childbirth? The correlation between the fear of loss of connection and the fear of childbirth

**Authors:** Fadime Bayri Bingol, Arzu Aydoğan, Zeynep Dilşah Karaçam, Derya Çayiroğlu, Büşra Karanfil, Hatice Nur Kaya

PMC · DOI: 10.1590/1806-9282.20240550 · 2024-08-30

## TL;DR

This study explores how fear of losing smartphone connection relates to fear of childbirth in pregnant women.

## Contribution

It identifies a clinical correlation between nomophobia and fear of childbirth in primiparous women.

## Key findings

- 19.5% of women had extreme nomophobia and 22.3% had clinical fear of childbirth.
- Higher smartphone usage and fetal development app use correlate with increased nomophobia and reduced childbirth fear.
- Nomophobia and fear of childbirth scores were statistically significantly correlated.

## Abstract

With the spread of smartphones, they have become an indispensable part of life, and nomophobia (No-Mobile-Phone Phobia) has emerged.

The present research is a cross-sectional study and was conducted with 3,870 primiparous pregnant women between April and May 2022. The research data were collected using the Personal Information Form, Nomophobia Questionnaire, and Wijma Delivery Expectancy/Experience Questionnaire.

The Wijma Delivery Expectancy/Experience Questionnaire score of the pregnant women who participated in the study was 22.3% (n=863) had a clinical fear of childbirth and 19.5% (n=753) had extreme nomophobia. Considering the correlation of the Nomophobia Questionnaire and Wijma Delivery Expectancy/Experience Questionnaire scores with other variables, it was found that the Wijma Delivery Expectancy/Experience Questionnaire scores increased with the increasing Nomophobia Questionnaire total score (p=0.000, r=236) and the Nomophobia Questionnaire total score and fear of childbirth increased with an increase in the daily phone usage time. It was also revealed that women who had smartphone applications related to fetal development had higher nomophobia levels (p=0.0001), while they had a lower fear of childbirth.

This study found that one in every five pregnant women was extremely nomophobic and had a clinical fear of childbirth and that nomophobia and the fear of childbirth were correlated at the clinical level. In this regard, women should prefer face-to-face communication rather than smartphones throughout the pregnancy period.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** No-Mobile-Phone Phobia (MESH:D010698), fear of childbirth (MESH:C000719212)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11371127