| Literature DB >> 16824233 |
J Elsinga1, Km van der Pal-de Bruin, S le Cessie, Lc de Jong-Potjer, Sp Verloove-Vanhorick, Wjj Assendelft.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To maximise the potential for reducing the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes, preconception counselling (PCC) is used to inform couples contemplating pregnancy about general and personal risk factors. Many initiatives have been developed to provide PCC, but none offers it routinely in a presumed low-risk population. The objective of the study was to investigate the extent to which women contemplating pregnancy can be reached when a PCC programme is routinely offered by general practitioners (GPs).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16824233 PMCID: PMC1552064 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-7-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Results over three consecutive years of the invitation by 30 general practices to provide PCC.
| Category of respondents | Year PCC was offered | ||
| 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | |
| Total population to be approached | 13,048 | 8,312 | 5,866 |
| Review of population by GP | |||
| Women included | 7,872 (60%) | 3,889 (47%) | 3,154 (54%) |
| Women excluded | 5,176 (40%) | 4,419 (53%) | 2,711 (46%) |
| Response of women included | |||
| Yes | 3,311 (42%) | 1,702 (44%) | 1769 (56%) |
| No | 4,561 (58%) | 2,187 (56%) | 1,385 (44%) |
| Interest in PCC of responders | |||
| Yes | 1,480 (45%) | 781 (46%) | 962 (54%) |
| No | 1,831 (55%) | 921 (54%) | 807 (46%) |
| Intended to get pregnant of interested responders | |||
| Within one year | 333 (23%) | 205 (26%) | 187 (19%) |
| Between one and five years | 480 (32%) | 282 (36%) | 333 (35%) |
| Term unknown | 607 (41%) | 267 (34%) | 419 (44%) |
| No desire for children, or for more children | 35 (2%) | 21 (3%) | 21 (2%) |
| Pregnant | 25 (2%) | 6 (1%) | 2 (0%) |
| Risk-assessment questionnaire | |||
| Sent | 378 | 147 | 179 |
| Returned | 260 (69%) | 87 (59%) | 144 (80%) |
| Preconception counselling | |||
| Women attending | 176 (72%) | 69 (73%) | 103 (76%) |
| Women already pregnant before attending | 52 (21%) | 17 (18%) | 18 (13%) |
| Women who had moved | 4 (2%) | 4 (4%) | 0 (0%) |
| Women no longer interested | 13 (5%) | 3 (3%) | 1 (1%) |
| Other | 1 (0%) | 2 (2%) | 13 (10%) |
Demographic characteristics of the women eligible in the three years PCC was offered.
| 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | ||
| n = 13,048 | n = 8,312 | n = 5,866 | ||
| Age | < 20 years | 568 (4%) | 490 (6%) | 491 (9%) |
| 20 to 24 years | 2,084 (16%) | 1,495 (18%) | 1,431 (24%) | |
| 25 to 29 years | 2,735 (21%) | 1,952 (24%) | 1,494 (26%) | |
| 30 to 34 years | 3,250 (25%) | 2,097 (25%) | 1,371 (23%) | |
| > 34 years | 4,410 (34%) | 2,278 (27%) | 1,079 (18%) | |
| Marital status* | Married/cohabiting | 2,903 (75%) | 1,294 (76%) | 607 (60%) |
| Permanent relationship | 351 (9%) | 154 (9%) | 174 (17%) | |
| Single | 597 (16%) | 264 (15%) | 236 (23%) | |
| Country of birth* | The Netherlands | 3,593 (93%) | 1,598 (93%) | 949 (93%) |
| Surinam/Netherlands Antilles | 55 (1%) | 25 (2%) | 17 (2%) | |
| Turkey/Morocco | 45 (1%) | 15 (1%) | 11 (1%) | |
| Other | 152 (4%) | 75 (4%) | 41 (4%) | |
| Education* | Basic | 843 (23%) | 384 (24%) | 189 (19%) |
| Intermediate | 1,596 (44%) | 691 (42%) | 474 (49%) | |
| University/college | 1,197 (33%) | 550 (34%) | 307 (32%) | |
| Medical insurance*† | National health insurance | 271 (68%) | 124 (66%) | 105 (63%) |
| Insurance for civil service employees | 13 (3%) | 11 (6%) | 9 (6%) | |
| Private insurance | 114 (29%) | 51 (27%) | 51 (31%) | |
| Not insured | 1 (0%) | 2 (1%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Previous pregnancies* | Yes | 1,701 (44%) | 773 (45%) | 644 (63%) |
| No | 2,177 (56%) | 950 (55%) | 377 (37%) |
* Because these characteristics were collected from two different questionnaires that not all women received, the numbers do not add up to the total number of women per response group.
† This characteristic was included in only one of the two questionnaires.
Demographic characteristics per response-group in the first year PCC was offered.
| 2000 | Excluded | Non responders | Not interested | Interested | |
| Age | < 20 years | 202 (4%) | 193 (4%) | 90 (5%) | 83 (6%) |
| 20 to 24 years | 632 (12%) | 806 (18%) | 268 (15%) | 379 (26%) | |
| 25 to 29 years | 824 (16%) | 1,081 (24%) | 319 (17%) | 510 (34%) | |
| 30 to 34 years | 1242 (24%) | 1,128 (25%) | 518 (28%) | 362 (24%) | |
| > 34 years | 2274 (44%) | 1,354 (29%) | 635 (35%) | 146 (10%) | |
| Marital status‡ | Married/cohabiting | 854 (76%) | 1,124 (77%) | 389 (73%) | 537 (72%) |
| Permanent relationship | 101 (9%) | 108 (7%) | 49 (9%) | 93 (13%) | |
| Single | 173 (15%) | 220 (15%) | 96 (18%) | 108 (15%) | |
| Country of birth‡ | The Netherlands | 1,042 (93%) | 1,353 (93%) | 511 (95%) | 688 (92%) |
| Surinam/Netherlands Antilles | 16 (1%) | 24 (2%) | 3 (1%) | 12 (2%) | |
| Turkey/Morocco | 21 (2%) | 13 (1%) | 3 (1%) | 8 (1%) | |
| Other | 42 (4%) | 61 (4%) | 15 (3%) | 34 (5%) | |
| Education‡ | Basic | 261 (25%) | 366 (27%) | 115 (23%) | 101 (14%) |
| Intermediate | 470 (44%) | 569 (41%) | 208 (41%) | 350 (50%) | |
| University/college | 330 (31%) | 437 (32%) | 178 (36%) | 252 (36%) | |
| Medical insurance‡§ | National health insurance | 27 (69%) | 45 (72%) | 1 (50%) | 198 (67%) |
| Insurance for civil service employees | 3 (8%) | 3 (5%) | 0 (0%) | 7 (2%) | |
| Private insurance | 9 (23%) | 13 (21%) | 1 (50%) | 91 (31%) | |
| Not insured | 0 (0%) | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Previous pregnancies‡ | Yes | 452 (40%) | 570 (39%) | 235 (44%) | 444 (60%) |
| No | 689 (60%) | 892 (61%) | 299 (56%) | 298 (40%) |
‡ Because these characteristics were collected from two different questionnaires only part of the women received, the numbers do not add up to the total amount of women per response group.
§ This characteristic was included in only one of the two questionnaires.
Pregnancies occurring within one year of an invitation to attend PCC.
| Year of invitation | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 |
| Number of pregnancies | 797 | 513 | 182 |
| Review of population by GP | |||
| Women included | 567 (71%) | 296 (58%) | 122 (67%) |
| Women excluded | 230 (29%) | 217 (42%) | 60 (33%) |
| Response of included women | |||
| Yes | 349 (44%) | 168 (33%) | 99 (54%) |
| No | 218 (27%) | 128 (25%) | 23 (13%) |
| Interest in PCC of responders | |||
| Yes | 246 (31%) | 119 (23%) | 74 (40%) |
| No | 103 (13%) | 49 (10%) | 25 (14%) |
| Desire to become pregnant of interested responders | |||
| Within one year | 166 (21%) | 81 (16%) | 51 (27%) |
| Between one and five years | 42 (5%) | 23 (4%) | 18 (10%) |
| Term unknown | 35 (4%) | 14 (3%) | 5 (3%) |
| No desire for children, or for more children | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Pregnant | 3 (1%) | 1 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Attended PCC before pregnancy | 60 (8%) | 48 (9%) | 36 (20%) |
||Because data were not collected over the total year in 2002, the reported number of pregnancies within that year was less than in the other years.
Reasons women were excluded by GPs in 2000, and reasons women who were invited to attend PCC in 2000 were not interested in PCC, both correlated with the pregnancies occurring in these groups within one year.
| Number of women | Pregnancies within one year | |
| Reasons for exclusion¶ | ||
| Completed family | 357 (23%) | 2 (15%) |
| Uterus extirpation | 3 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Sterilisation (either women or men) | 16 (1%) | 0 (0%) |
| Not speaking Dutch | 313 (20%) | 2 (15%) |
| Sub-fertility or infertility | 27 (2%) | 1 (8%) |
| Pregnant | 24 (2%) | 1 (8%) |
| Definitive social circumstances | 172 (11%) | 3 (23%) |
| Temporary social circumstances | 288 (19%) | 3 (23%) |
| Not (sexually) active | 328 (21%) | 0 (0%) |
| Earlier participation in PCC | 7 (1%) | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 1 (0%) | 1 (8%) |
| Reasons for not being interested | ||
| No partner | 20 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| No current desire for children, or no desire for more children | 553 (67%) | 5 (20%) |
| Pregnant | 32 (4%) | 3 (12%) |
| Already well informed | 86 (10%) | 9 (36%) |
| Moved | 15 (2%) | 0 (0%) |
| Infertile (intentionally or unintentionally) | 7 (1%) | 0 (0%) |
| Other | 38 (5%) | 3 (12%) |
| No reason given | 63 (8%) | 5 (20%) |
¶ As the general practitioner did not always indicate a reason for exclusion, this is often missing.