Florence Nightingale Journal of Nursing
Research Articles

Mindfulness-Based Breathing Exercise on Health Profile, Vital Signs, and Fetal Heart Rate in Pregnant Women Diagnosed With Pre-Eclampsia: A Randomized Control Trial

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Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Nursing, Muş Alparslan University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Muş, Türkiye

2.

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Nursing, Gaziantep University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Gaziantep, Türkiye

Florence Nightingale J Nurs 2025; 33: 1-15
DOI: 10.5152/FNJN.2025.24136
Read: 77 Downloads: 22 Published: 10 March 2025

AIM: This study aimed to determine the effect of mindfulness-based breathing exercise on health profile, vital signs, and fetal heart rate in pregnant women diagnosed with pre-eclampsia.

METHOD: This is a randomized controlled trial. Data were collected between October 1, 2023, and May 19, 2024, with a sample of 66 pregnant women who were randomly assigned to the mindfulness-based breathing exercise (n = 33) or control (n = 33) groups. The experimental group received 20 minutes of mindfulness-based breathing exercise every 8 hours for 72 hours. The primary outcomes of the study were health profile, vital signs, and basal fetal heart rate. Secondary outcomes of the study are health profile sub-dimensions and fetal movement count.

RESULTS: Compared to the control group, a 59.2% positive increase over time in the health profile of the mindfulness-based breathing exercise group was observed. Additionally, there was a 10% decrease in pain, 11.4% decrease in emotional reactions, 80.7% increase in sleep quality, 13.3% decrease in social isolation, 38.8% increase in physical activity, and 87.1% increase in energy level, 9.8% decrease in mean pulse rate, 15.8% decrease in respiratory rate, 73.1% increase in oxygen saturation, 7% decrease in systolic blood pressure, and 6.4% decrease in diastolic blood pressure, 6.5% increase in mean fetal movement count was determined. At the fourth measurement, the experimental group had a higher mean basal fetal heart rate than the control group.

CONCLUSION: Mindfulness-based breathing exercise can be safely used as a care intervention to improve the health profile of pregnant women with pre-eclampsia.

Cite this article as: Kılıçlı, A., & Zeyneloğlu, S. (2025). Mindfulness-based breathing exercise on health profile, vital signs, and fetal heart rate in pregnant women diagnosed with pre-eclampsia: A randomized controlled trial. Florence Nightingale Journal of Nursing, 33, 0136, doi: 10.5152/FNJN.2025.24136.

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