There is still a lot of uncertainty about the effects of most medicines on the unborn child. A paper published in BMC Medical Ethics calls for a paradigm shift in the way we generate knowledge on the effects of medicines in pregnancy, paving the way for a learning health care system.
Pregnancy is a time of close monitoring, when large amounts of health data is collected. This data can help identify problems with maternal health, but also point to problems for the unborn child. Within the framework of the ConcePTION project, researchers from UMC Utrecht have explored whether this data could support a transition to a Learning Healthcare System, using health data both to study and develop new insights about the effects of medical treatments for both mother and child, and to guide treatment decisions for women at the point of care.
However, this shift to a learning health care system requires collaboration between a wide range of stakeholders. Drawing from experiences in the field of rare diseases, where patients have played an important part in changing the way genetic conditions are both studied and treated, the authors suggest that pregnant women themselves have an important part to play in the shift to a new paradigm.
According to Marieke Hollestelle, PhD student at UMC Utrecht, the literature suggests that solidarity has played an important role for rare disease patients in changing the approaches to treatment and research. This speaks for solidarity as an entry-point to exploring the role that the pregnant woman can play. However, for solidarity to become a successful vehicle for change, individuals might need to be encouraged to rely on solidarity to achieve progress. Where solidarity means enacted commitments on the part of an individual to assist someone who they feel are similar in some aspect that feels relevant to them. In the paper, the authors explain that this kind of solidarity is not something that can be imposed upon pregnant women. However, they argue that it is possible to use empowerment as a tool to stimulate women who are pregnant to engage in the paradigm shift on the basis of solidarity.
“Empowerment means creating awareness about the situation anyone who is pregnant finds themselves in, explaining how scientific research can help close the current knowledge gap, and how someone who is pregnant can contribute, to for example the ConcePTION ecosystem” says Marieke Hollestelle.
However, the authors make it clear that to raise awareness and empower pregnant women, requires the help from other stakeholders, such as healthcare professionals, data scientists, funding agencies, registries and other professionals.
Read the paper: Hollestelle, M.J., van der Graaf, R., Sturkenboom, M.C. & van Delden J.JM. (2023) Stimulating solidarity to improve knowledge on medications used during pregnancy, BMC Med Ethics 24(44), DOI 10.1186/s12910-023-00924-x
By Josepine Fernow