| Literature DB >> 27213854 |
Liesl Zühlke1, Letitia Acquah2.
Abstract
The World Health Organisation (WHO) supports pre-conception care (PCC) towards improving health and pregnancy outcomes. PPC entails a continuum of promotive, preventative and curative health and social interventions. PPC identifies current and potential medical problems of women of childbearing age towards strategising optimal pregnancy outcomes, whereas antenatal care constitutes the care provided during pregnancy. Optimised PPC and antenatal care would improve civil society and maternal, child and public health. Multiple factors bar most African women from receiving antenatal care. Additionally, PPC is rarely available as a standard of care in many African settings, despite the high maternal mortality rate throughout Africa. African women and healthcare facilitators must cooperate to strategise cost-effective and cost-efficient PPC. This should streamline their limited resources within their socio-cultural preferences, towards short- and long-term improvement of pregnancy outcomes. This review discusses the relevance of and need for PPC in resource-challenged African settings, and emphasises preventative and curative health interventions for congenital and acquired heart disease. We also consider two additional conditions, HIV/AIDS and hypertension, as these are two of the most important co-morbidities encountered in Africa, with significant burden of disease. Finally we advocate strongly for PPC to be considered as a key intervention for reducing maternal mortality rates on the African continent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27213854 PMCID: PMC4928169 DOI: 10.5830/CVJA-2016-017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc J Afr ISSN: 1015-9657 Impact factor: 1.167
Pre-conception care
| Nutritional conditions | Medical history | Conditions that need time to correct prior to conception |
| Genetic conditions | Psychosocial issues | Interventions not usually undertaken in pregnancy |
| Vaccine-preventable conditions | Physical examination | Intervention considered only because a pregnancy is planned. |
| Environmental health | Laboratory tests | Conditions that might change the choice/timing or method to conceive |
| Infertility/subfertility | Family history | Conditions requiring early post-conception pre-natal care |
| Female genital mutilation | Nutritional assessment | |
| Too early, unwanted and rapid successive pregnancies | ||
| Sexually transmitted infections | ||
| HIV | ||
| Interpersonal violence | ||
| Mental health | ||
| Psychoactive substance use | ||
| Tobacco use |
Adapted from: Preconception care to reduce maternal and childhood mortality and morbidity. Meeting report and packages of interventions: WHO HQ, February 2012; Preconception care: Greater New York Chapter of the March of Dimes Preconception Care Curriculum Working Group 2015.
Clinical pearls: planning pregnancy with certain medical conditions
| Congenital heart disease | Rubella vaccination | WHO IV risk score | Needs comprehensive risk assessment before pregnancy |
| Rheumatic heart disease | Primary prevention of group A streptococcus with penicillin | WHO IV risk score | Needs comprehensive risk assessment before pregnancy |
| Institute secondary prevention with penicillin after a diagnosis of ARF/RHD | |||
| Hypertension | Identify and treat secondary causes, treat sleep-disordered breathing, lifestyle changes | ACE inhibitors and ARBs | Normalise pre-pregnancy blood pressure |
| HIV | Treat co-morbidities | None | Avoid efavirenz if possible |
| Optimise ART to maximal suppression of viral load | |||
| Improved ART adherence | |||
| Advise appropriate contraception | |||
| General | Screen for anaemia | As per examination | Information, education and counselling |
| Food supplementation, iron and folate supplementation | Promote exercise and healthy diet | ||
| Family planning and spacing | |||
| Weight control | |||
| Substance and tobacco control |
Fig. 1.Severe mitral stenosis (A) Doppler echocardiography; mean gradient 15 mmHg and (B) dilated left atrium with reduced excursion.