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Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis

BACKGROUND: Effective postnatal care is important for optimal care of women and newborns–to promote health and wellbeing, identify and treat clinical and psychosocial concerns, and to provide support for families. Yet uptake of formal postnatal care services is low and inequitable in many countries....

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Autores principales: Sacks, Emma, Finlayson, Kenneth, Brizuela, Vanessa, Crossland, Nicola, Ziegler, Daniela, Sauvé, Caroline, Langlois, Étienne V., Javadi, Dena, Downe, Soo, Bonet, Mercedes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9374256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35960752
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270264
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author Sacks, Emma
Finlayson, Kenneth
Brizuela, Vanessa
Crossland, Nicola
Ziegler, Daniela
Sauvé, Caroline
Langlois, Étienne V.
Javadi, Dena
Downe, Soo
Bonet, Mercedes
author_facet Sacks, Emma
Finlayson, Kenneth
Brizuela, Vanessa
Crossland, Nicola
Ziegler, Daniela
Sauvé, Caroline
Langlois, Étienne V.
Javadi, Dena
Downe, Soo
Bonet, Mercedes
author_sort Sacks, Emma
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Effective postnatal care is important for optimal care of women and newborns–to promote health and wellbeing, identify and treat clinical and psychosocial concerns, and to provide support for families. Yet uptake of formal postnatal care services is low and inequitable in many countries. As part of a larger study examining the views of women, partners, and families requiring both routine and specialised care, we analysed a subset of data on the views and experiences of women related to routine postnatal care. METHODS: We undertook a qualitative evidence synthesis, using a framework analysis approach. We included studies published up to December 2019 with extractable qualitative data, with no language restriction. We focused on women in the general population and their accounts of routine postnatal care utilization. We searched MEDLINE, PUBMED, CINAHL, EMBASE, EBM-Reviews, and grey literature. Two reviewers screened each study independently; inclusion was agreed by consensus. Data abstraction and scientific quality assessment were carried out using a study-specific extraction form and established quality assessment tools. The analysis framework was developed a priori based on previous knowledge and research on the topic and adapted. Due to the number of included texts, the final synthesis was developed inductively from the initial framework by iterative sampling of the included studies, until data saturation was achieved. Findings are presented by high versus low/middle income country, and by confidence in the finding, applying the GRADE-CERQual approach. FINDINGS: Of 12,678 papers, 512 met the inclusion criteria; 59 articles were sampled for analysis. Five themes were identified: access and availability; physical and human resources; external influences; social norms; and experience of care. High confidence study findings included the perceived low value of postnatal care for healthy women and infants; concerns around access and quality of care; and women’s desire for more emotional and psychosocial support during the postnatal period. These findings highlight multiple missed opportunities for postnatal care promotion and ensuring continuity of care. CONCLUSIONS: Factors that influence women’s utilization of postnatal care are interlinked, and include access, quality, and social norms. Many women recognised the specific challenges of the postnatal period and emphasised the need for emotional and psychosocial support in this time, in addition to clinical care. While this is likely a universal need, studies on mental health needs have predominantly been conducted in high-income settings. Postnatal care programmes and related research should consider these multiple drivers and multi-faceted needs, and the holistic postpartum needs of women and their families should be studied in a wider range of settings. REGISTRATION: This protocol is registered in the PROSPERO database for systematic reviews: CRD42019139183.
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spelling pubmed-93742562022-08-13 Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis Sacks, Emma Finlayson, Kenneth Brizuela, Vanessa Crossland, Nicola Ziegler, Daniela Sauvé, Caroline Langlois, Étienne V. Javadi, Dena Downe, Soo Bonet, Mercedes PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Effective postnatal care is important for optimal care of women and newborns–to promote health and wellbeing, identify and treat clinical and psychosocial concerns, and to provide support for families. Yet uptake of formal postnatal care services is low and inequitable in many countries. As part of a larger study examining the views of women, partners, and families requiring both routine and specialised care, we analysed a subset of data on the views and experiences of women related to routine postnatal care. METHODS: We undertook a qualitative evidence synthesis, using a framework analysis approach. We included studies published up to December 2019 with extractable qualitative data, with no language restriction. We focused on women in the general population and their accounts of routine postnatal care utilization. We searched MEDLINE, PUBMED, CINAHL, EMBASE, EBM-Reviews, and grey literature. Two reviewers screened each study independently; inclusion was agreed by consensus. Data abstraction and scientific quality assessment were carried out using a study-specific extraction form and established quality assessment tools. The analysis framework was developed a priori based on previous knowledge and research on the topic and adapted. Due to the number of included texts, the final synthesis was developed inductively from the initial framework by iterative sampling of the included studies, until data saturation was achieved. Findings are presented by high versus low/middle income country, and by confidence in the finding, applying the GRADE-CERQual approach. FINDINGS: Of 12,678 papers, 512 met the inclusion criteria; 59 articles were sampled for analysis. Five themes were identified: access and availability; physical and human resources; external influences; social norms; and experience of care. High confidence study findings included the perceived low value of postnatal care for healthy women and infants; concerns around access and quality of care; and women’s desire for more emotional and psychosocial support during the postnatal period. These findings highlight multiple missed opportunities for postnatal care promotion and ensuring continuity of care. CONCLUSIONS: Factors that influence women’s utilization of postnatal care are interlinked, and include access, quality, and social norms. Many women recognised the specific challenges of the postnatal period and emphasised the need for emotional and psychosocial support in this time, in addition to clinical care. While this is likely a universal need, studies on mental health needs have predominantly been conducted in high-income settings. Postnatal care programmes and related research should consider these multiple drivers and multi-faceted needs, and the holistic postpartum needs of women and their families should be studied in a wider range of settings. REGISTRATION: This protocol is registered in the PROSPERO database for systematic reviews: CRD42019139183. Public Library of Science 2022-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9374256/ /pubmed/35960752 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270264 Text en © 2022 Sacks et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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 Research Article
Sacks, Emma
Finlayson, Kenneth
Brizuela, Vanessa
Crossland, Nicola
Ziegler, Daniela
Sauvé, Caroline
Langlois, Étienne V.
Javadi, Dena
Downe, Soo
Bonet, Mercedes
Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title_full Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title_fullStr Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title_short Factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: Findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
title_sort factors that influence uptake of routine postnatal care: findings on women’s perspectives from a qualitative evidence synthesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9374256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35960752
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0270264
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