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A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations

BACKGROUND: Although this is beginning to change, the content of antenatal care has been relatively neglected in safe-motherhood program efforts. This appears in part to be due to an unwarranted belief that interventions over this period have far less impact than those provided around the time of bi...

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Autores principales: Hodgins, Stephen, Tielsch, James, Rankin, Kristen, Robinson, Amber, Kearns, Annie, Caglia, Jacquelyn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4990268/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27537281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160562
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author Hodgins, Stephen
Tielsch, James
Rankin, Kristen
Robinson, Amber
Kearns, Annie
Caglia, Jacquelyn
author_facet Hodgins, Stephen
Tielsch, James
Rankin, Kristen
Robinson, Amber
Kearns, Annie
Caglia, Jacquelyn
author_sort Hodgins, Stephen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although this is beginning to change, the content of antenatal care has been relatively neglected in safe-motherhood program efforts. This appears in part to be due to an unwarranted belief that interventions over this period have far less impact than those provided around the time of birth. In this par, we review available evidence for 21 interventions potentially deliverable during pregnancy at high coverage to neglected populations in low income countries, with regard to effectiveness in reducing risk of: maternal mortality, newborn mortality, stillbirth, prematurity and intrauterine growth restriction. Selection was restricted to interventions that can be provided by non-professional health auxiliaries and not requiring laboratory support. METHODS: In this narrative review, we included relevant Cochrane and other systematic reviews and did comprehensive bibliographic searches. Inclusion criteria varied by intervention; where available randomized controlled trial evidence was insufficient, observational study evidence was considered. For each intervention we focused on overall contribution to our outcomes of interest, across varying epidemiologies. RESULTS: In the aggregate, achieving high effective coverage for this set of interventions would very substantially reduce risk for our outcomes of interest and reduce outcome inequities. Certain specific interventions, if pushed to high coverage have significant potential impact across many settings. For example, reliable detection of pre-eclampsia followed by timely delivery could prevent up to ¼ of newborn and stillbirth deaths and over 90% of maternal eclampsia/pre-eclampsia deaths. Other interventions have potent effects in specific settings: in areas of high P falciparum burden, systematic use of insecticide-treated nets and/or intermittent presumptive therapy in pregnancy could reduce maternal mortality by up to 10%, newborn mortality by up to 20%, and stillbirths by up to 25–30%. Behavioral interventions targeting practices at birth and in the hours that follow can have substantial impact in settings where many births happen at home: in such circumstances early initiation of breastfeeding can reduce risk of newborn death by up to 20%; good thermal care practices can reduce mortality risk by a similar order of magnitude. CONCLUSIONS: Simple interventions delivered during pregnancy have considerable potential impact on important mortality outcomes. More programmatic effort is warranted to ensure high effective coverage.
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spelling pubmed-49902682016-08-29 A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations Hodgins, Stephen Tielsch, James Rankin, Kristen Robinson, Amber Kearns, Annie Caglia, Jacquelyn PLoS One Collection Review BACKGROUND: Although this is beginning to change, the content of antenatal care has been relatively neglected in safe-motherhood program efforts. This appears in part to be due to an unwarranted belief that interventions over this period have far less impact than those provided around the time of birth. In this par, we review available evidence for 21 interventions potentially deliverable during pregnancy at high coverage to neglected populations in low income countries, with regard to effectiveness in reducing risk of: maternal mortality, newborn mortality, stillbirth, prematurity and intrauterine growth restriction. Selection was restricted to interventions that can be provided by non-professional health auxiliaries and not requiring laboratory support. METHODS: In this narrative review, we included relevant Cochrane and other systematic reviews and did comprehensive bibliographic searches. Inclusion criteria varied by intervention; where available randomized controlled trial evidence was insufficient, observational study evidence was considered. For each intervention we focused on overall contribution to our outcomes of interest, across varying epidemiologies. RESULTS: In the aggregate, achieving high effective coverage for this set of interventions would very substantially reduce risk for our outcomes of interest and reduce outcome inequities. Certain specific interventions, if pushed to high coverage have significant potential impact across many settings. For example, reliable detection of pre-eclampsia followed by timely delivery could prevent up to ¼ of newborn and stillbirth deaths and over 90% of maternal eclampsia/pre-eclampsia deaths. Other interventions have potent effects in specific settings: in areas of high P falciparum burden, systematic use of insecticide-treated nets and/or intermittent presumptive therapy in pregnancy could reduce maternal mortality by up to 10%, newborn mortality by up to 20%, and stillbirths by up to 25–30%. Behavioral interventions targeting practices at birth and in the hours that follow can have substantial impact in settings where many births happen at home: in such circumstances early initiation of breastfeeding can reduce risk of newborn death by up to 20%; good thermal care practices can reduce mortality risk by a similar order of magnitude. CONCLUSIONS: Simple interventions delivered during pregnancy have considerable potential impact on important mortality outcomes. More programmatic effort is warranted to ensure high effective coverage. Public Library of Science 2016-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4990268/ /pubmed/27537281 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160562 Text en © 2016 Hodgins et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Collection Review
Hodgins, Stephen
Tielsch, James
Rankin, Kristen
Robinson, Amber
Kearns, Annie
Caglia, Jacquelyn
A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title_full A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title_fullStr A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title_full_unstemmed A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title_short A New Look at Care in Pregnancy: Simple, Effective Interventions for Neglected Populations
title_sort new look at care in pregnancy: simple, effective interventions for neglected populations
topic Collection Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4990268/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27537281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160562
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