| Literature DB >> 26130160 |
Martha Perry1, Francisco Becerra2, Josephine Kavanagh3, Angéline Serre4, Emily Vargas5, Victor Becerril6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This review is part of a European Commission project, MASCOT, aimed at reducing maternal and child health inequalities. The purpose was to identify and describe the literature on community-based interventions on maternal health in high-income countries (HIC) and conceptually map the literature according to country focus, topics addressed, nature of the intervention and the intervention provider, and interventions designed to address inequalities in maternal health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26130160 PMCID: PMC4487953 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-014-0063-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Eligibility criteria of publications
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| 1. Study design was a Randomised Control Trial or systematic review |
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Generic codes applied to full text
| 1. Country(ies) where study done | 8. Intervention topic. |
| 2. Country(ies) of first author | 9. Period targeted by intervention: Pregnancy (which includes abortion and miscarriage); Intrapartum; Postpartum. |
| 3. Paper targeted at or delivered to specific PROGRESS-Plus group or disadvantaged group as defined by PROGRESS-Plus. These categories are: Place of Residence (rural women for example), Race/Ethnicity, Occupation, Religion, Education, Socioeconomic Status, and Social Capital, and Plus represents additional categories such as Age, Disability and Sexual Orientation. | 10. Data collected: maternal health; child health; cost/health economics; service utilisation |
| 4. Paper addresses WHO health promotion topics. This includes health promotion activities and health education activities within the community, and for the community, including that which occurs in health service settings. | 11. Funding |
| 5. Research question(s) study might answer: Health systems; Community settings; Tracer conditions/single clinical interventions; Tracer conditions/other interventions; Health service utilisation/non-intervention research; Health promotion; Other. | 12. HIC Codes |
| 6. Study design: RCT or SR | a. Intervention delivery: home; telephone; peer delivered; other |
| 7. Intervention recipient: women; family; male partner; traditional birth attendant; community health worker; midwife/nurse; other mid-level provider; doctor/obstetrician; community; manager(s); policy maker(s); system; rural setting; urban setting; other. | b. Intervention provider: health professional; peer; community volunteer; other |
Figure 1Flow of study selection.
Results of conceptual mapping of included references
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| Countries | |||
| Australia | 13 (13.7%) | 12 (50.0%)* | |
| Canada | 14 (14.7%) | 14 (58.3%) | |
| United Kingdom | 16 (16.8%) | 17 (70.8%) | |
| United States | 42 (44.2%) | 18 (75.0%) | |
| Other HIC | 10 (10.6%) | 15 (62.5%) | |
| Topic | |||
| Birth preparedness | 9 (7.6%) | 8 (8.4%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Breastfeeding | 27 (22.7%) | 16 (16.8%) | 11 (45.8%) |
| Drug use | 4 (3.7%) | 4 (4.2%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Family planning | 7 (5.8%) | 7 (7.4%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Nutrition and/or physical activity | 5 (4.2%) | 5 (5.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Parenting and child care | 27 (22.7%) | 24 (25.3%) | 3 (12.5%) |
| Post-natal depression | 30 (25.2%) | 24 (25.3%) | 6 (25.0%) |
| Smoking cessation | 5 (4.2%) | 4 (4.2%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Other | 5 (4.2%) | 3 (3.1%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Intervention delivery | |||
| Home only | 44 (37.0%) | 40 (42.1%) | 4 (16.7%) |
| Peer only | 6 (5.0%) | 4 (4.2%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Telephone only | 7 (5.9%) | 6 (6.3%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Combined community settings | 32 (26.9%) | 21 (22.1%) | 11 (45.8%) |
| Combined community and health facility | 30 (25.2%) | 24 (25.3%) | 6 (25%) |
| Intervention provider | |||
| Community volunteer | 5 (4.2%) | 4 (4.2%) | 1 (4.2%) |
| Peer | 23 (19.3%) | 21 (22.1%) | 2 (8.3%) |
| Health Professional | 61 (51.3%) | 52 (54.8%) | 9 (37.5%) |
| Combined health worker and peer and/or community volunteer | 26 (21.8%) | 14 (14.7%) | 12 (50.0%) |
| Other | 4 (3.4%) | 4 (4.2%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Population targeted | |||
| PROGRESS Plus group | 39 (32.8%) | 35 (36.8%) | 4 (16.7%) |
| Universal | 80 (67.2%) | 60 (63.2%) | 20 (83.3%) |
*The percentage represents the number of times that there are one or more studies from the country in the 24 systematic reviews included in this scoping study.
Type of data collected in included references
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| Maternal health outcomes | 111 (93.3%) |
| Child health outcomes | 51 (42.9%) |
| Service Utilisation | 17 (14.3%) |
| Cost/Health economics | 14 (11.8%) |
PROGRESS Plus Population targeted in included references
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| Low socio-economic status | 21 (17.6%) |
| Adolescents | 14 (11.8%) |
| Black and ethnic minorities | 10 (8.4%) |
| Other | 6 (5.0%) |
Sources of funding for community-based interventions in HIC
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| Government agency | 80 (67.2%) |
| No funding acknowledged | 26 (21.8%) |
| Not-for-profit organisation | 21 (17.6%) |
| Academic institution | 11 (8.7%) |
| Private sector organisation | 4 (3.3%) |
| International organisation | 1 (0.8%) |