| Literature DB >> 28685040 |
Mary Carol Jennings1, Subarna Pradhan2, Meike Schleiff1, Emma Sacks1, Paul A Freeman3,4, Sundeep Gupta5, Bahie M Rassekh6, Henry B Perry1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We summarize the findings of assessments of projects, programs, and research studies (collectively referred to as projects) included in a larger review of the effectiveness of community-based primary health care (CBPHC) in improving maternal, neonatal and child health (MNCH). Findings on neonatal and child health are reported elsewhere in this series.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28685040 PMCID: PMC5491947 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.07.010902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Number of interventions implemented in individual assessments of the effectiveness of community-based primary health care in improving maternal health.
Effect size, direction and significance of community–based primary health care on maternal mortality outcomes*
| Document | Intervention type | Effect | Study population | Effect size and confidence interval | Significance level† |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colbourn 2013 [S39] | Participatory women's groups in the community and quality improvement at health centers | Increase | Two–by–two factorial cluster randomized controlled trial of community compared to facility intervention, 14 576 births during baseline and 20 576 births during intervention, in 3 districts in rural Malawi, over 29 months from 2007–2010 | 8% increase in odds of maternal mortality in facility + community arm compared to control (OR: 1.08, 95% CI, 0.46–2.57) | |
| Manandhar 2004 [S83] | Participatory women's groups in the community, with 9 meetings per month and action–learning cycle | Decrease | Cluster–randomized controlled trial of 12 pairs of community clusters in 28 931 women in rural Nepal, over 2 years from 2001–2003 | 78% decrease in odds of maternal mortality in community intervention clusters compared to control clusters (OR: 0.22, 95% CI, 0.05–0.90), a maternal mortality ratio of 69 compared to 341 per 100 000 live births, respectively | |
| Zhenxuan 1995 [S152] | Linked community–based mass health education campaign with facility– and community–based strengthening of emergency services | Decrease | Quasi–experimental pilot study compared to control area, covering 8000 deliveries per year in one county in peri–urban China, over 3 years from 1985–1988 | Maternal mortality ratio (per 100 000 live births) decreased by 75.7% in the intervention areas and by 5.5% ( | |
| Seim 2014 [S128] | Community mobilization to identify and refer protracted labor cases | Decrease | Pilot impact assessment, 12 254 births in rural Niger over 3 years from 2008–2011 | Birth–related maternal mortality ratio fell by 73% over 3 y, from 630 to 170 per 100 000 live births | |
| Koenig 1988 [S70] | Provision of community–based family planning services | Decrease | Quasi–experimental study compared intervention to control areas using demographic surveillance data from 187 523 people in 149 villages, 70 in intervention and 79 in control, in Matlab, Bangladesh over 9 years from 1976–1985 | Significant overall decrease in maternal mortality rate for intervention vs control (66 vs 121 deaths per 100 000 women of childbearing age) but no significant change in maternal mortality ratio (effect size not reported) | |
| Fauveau 1991 [S51] | Provision of antenatal and maternity care and surveillance of vital events in the home and community | Decrease | Non–randomized evaluation of intervention villages compared to neighboring non–intervention villages with 196.000 total population, in rural Bangladesh over 3 years from 1978–1981 | 65% decrease in odds of maternal mortality in intervention compared to control area (OR: 0.35, 95% CI, 0.13–0.93), or 140 vs 380 per 100 000 live births | |
| Fauveau 1990 [S50] | Provision of primary and preventive care (maternal and child) in the home and community | Decrease | Non–randomized evaluation of intervention villages compared to neighboring non–intervention villages with 196 000 total population, in rural Bangladesh over 3 years from 1978–1981 | 42% lower rate of maternal mortality in control vs intervention (authors reported RR in control over intervention: RR 1.73, 95% CI, 1.02–2.93) (rate of 5.0 vs rate of 8.6 per 10 000 women of child–bearing age) | |
| Asha–India 2008 [S19] | Provision of community–based primary and antenatal care and women's empowerment in slum communities | Decrease | Program evaluation of intervention population of 300 000 people in urban slums in India, over 20 years, reporting data from 2007–2008 | Zero deaths in Asha slums compared to 540 per 100 000 live births in India country–wide | N/A (maternal mortality ratio in slum areas compared to overall country ratio) |
| CARE Nicaragua 2008 [S33] | Increase access and improve quality of maternal services through linking communities to facilities and through community mobilization and communication campaign | Decrease | Program evaluation of intervention in population of 174 367 (58 052 women of reproductive age) in 173 rural communities in Nicaragua over 5 years from 2002–2007 | Maternal mortality rate decreased from 150 to 34 per 100 000 live births, with an annual average of 5500 deliveries over the 6 years of the intervention; maternal mortality ratio for the entire intervention area decreased from 119 to 60 per 100 000 live births over that time as well (a decrease of 49.2% compared to a national decrease of 42.6%) | N/A (maternal mortality rate decreased from baseline to endline in the primary referral hospital intervention area) |
| Curamericas–Guatemala–A&B 2007 [S41–42] | Care Groups and community–based impact–oriented care delivery/surveillance | Decrease | Program evaluation of intervention in population ranging in size from 11 123 (at end evaluation) to 14 272 (at mid–point) women of reproductive age, in 3 rural municipalities in Guatemala over 5 years from 2002–2007 | Maternal mortality ratio decreased in all intervention areas relative to national data used as control (508 per 100 000 live births to zero, and 1124 per 100 000 live births to zero, over 4 years of data) | N/A (not powered sufficiently for statistical testing; diverse results) |
| Foord 1995 [S54] | Provision of primary and antenatal care in the community, and establishment of referral linkages | Decrease | Non–randomized evaluation of intervention compared to similar control area, each with a population of 1300, in a rural district of the Gambia over 2 years from 1989–1991 | 1 death in intervention area compared to 5 deaths in control area, giving a maternal mortality ratio of 130 per 100 000 live births in the intervention compared to 700 in control area | N/A (not powered sufficiently for statistical testing) |
| Lamb 1984 [S73] | Provision of direct medical care, nutrition and vital statistics surveillance in community | Decrease | Non–randomized non–controlled evaluation of intervention impact in 4 villages with total population of 2000, in rural Gambia over 10 years from 1974–1984 | No pregnancy–related deaths (per 1000 women of child bearing age) were observed in the community for the 8 years of intervention, compared to the annual 16 that would be expected using rates in comparable non–intervention areas | N/A (not powered sufficiently for statistical testing) |
| Emond 2002 [S47] | Provision of antenatal care in the community | Decrease | Non–randomized non–controlled evaluation of an intervention in a population of 42 000 in an urban district in Brazil over 30 months from 1995–1997 | Maternal mortality ratio decreased from 335 per 100 000 live births prior to intervention, to zero maternal deaths during the 1 year after the intervention | N/A (not powered sufficiently for statistical testing) |
| Purdin 2009 [S117] | Community education campaign and creation of emergency obstetric centers linked to primary care centers | Decrease | Non–randomized non–controlled evaluation of intervention among community of 96 300 Afghan refugees in Pakistan over 4 years from 2004–2007 | Annual maternal mortality ratio decreased from 291 to 102 per 100 000 live births over 4 years | N/A (baseline and endline rates calculated from two separate sources) |
| Findley 2015 [S53] | Behavior change and health systems integration | Decrease | Non–randomized evaluation of intervention compared to control and before compared to after, of 2360 women at baseline and 4628 at follow–up, in 3 states in northern Nigeria over 4 years from 2009–2013 | Estimated maternal mortality ratio showed a larger decrease in the intervention than in the control communities, from 1270 to 1057 (interventions) and to 1262 (controls) per 100 000 live births | N/A (based on estimates) |
N/A – not available; RR – rate ratio, CI – confidence interval, OR – odds ratio
* For assessments in which maternal mortality was the primary outcome indicator. The full references are shown in Appendix S1 in Online Supplementary Document.
† Significant results indicated in bold font.
Effect size, direction and significance of community–based primary health care on maternal morbidity outcomes*
| Reference | Intervention type | Effect | Population | Effect size and confidence interval | Significance level† | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Derman 2006 [S45] | Auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs) administered oral misoprostol (or placebo) at home births they attended | Decrease | A randomized placebo–controlled trial assigned 812 women to oral misoprostol and 808 to placebo after home–based delivery by 25 ANMs, in rural India over 3 years from 2002–2005 | 47% decrease in incidence of PPH (6.4% in intervention vs 12.6% in control, RR: 0.53, 95% CI: 0.39–0.74); 83% decrease in severe PPH (0.2% in intervention vs 1.2% in control, RR: 0.16, 95% CI: 0.04–0.91). 1 case PPH prevented for every 18 women given chemoprophylaxis | ||
| Mobeen 2011 [S95] | Trained traditional birth attendants (TBAs) administered misoprostol (or placebo) at home deliveries they attended | Decrease | A randomized double–blind placebo-controlled trial assigned 534 women to oral misoprostol and 585 to placebo after home–based delivery by 81 TBAs, in one province in rural Pakistan over 24 months from 2006–2007 | 24% reduction in PPH after delivery (16.5% in intervention vs 21.9% in control, RR: 0.76, 95% CI 0.59–0.97); Insignificant decrease in severe PPH (RR: 0.57, 95% CI: 0.27–1.22) | ||
| Stanton 2013 [S138] | Community health officers injected prophylactic oxytocin (or placebo) at home births they attended | Decrease | A community–based, cluster–randomized controlled trial assigned births conducted by 54 community health officers were randomized to study arm by officer, in 4 rural districts in Ghana, 689 in intervention and 897 in control, over 19 months from 2011–2012 | Reduction of 51% in PPH (2.6% in intervention vs 5.5% in control, RR: 0.49, 95% CI: 0.27–0.88) No significant change in severe PPH (1 case in intervention, 8 in control group) | ||
| Mbonye 2008–5 [S90] | 4 cadres of community health workers administered intermittent preventive treatment (IPT) for malaria in pregnancy in the community, compared to routine care in health clinics | Decrease | A non–randomized community trial assigned 2081 women (21 communities) to intervention and 704 women (4 communities) to control in 9 sub–counties of one district in central, rural Uganda over 21 months from 2003–2005 | Prevalence of malaria episodes decreased from 49.5% to 17.6% in intervention and from 39.1% to 13.1% in control (both | ||
| Mbonye 2008–3 [S89] | 4 cadres of community health workers administered intermittent preventive treatment for malaria in pregnancy in the community, compared to in health clinics | Decrease | A non–randomized community trial assigned 2081 women (21 communities) to intervention and 704 women (4 communities) to control in 9 sub–counties of one district in central, rural Uganda over 21 months from 2003–2005 | Decreased prevalence of reported malaria episodes in both community and facility distribution of IPT (64% in community, from 49.5% to 17.6%, vs 66% decrease in facilities, from 39.1%, to 13.1%) (both | ||
| Ndiaye 2009 [S105] | Positive deviance program using community–based volunteers to promote maternal health and nutrition, and to distribute iron supplements, to control anemia during pregnancy | Decrease (improvement) | A quasi–experimental design using pre–post evaluation of independent cross–section samples assessed 371 women in one community in rural Senegal over 9 months in 2003 | 75% reduction in risk of anemia, based on mean hemoglobin measurements, in the intervention compared to control area (no positive deviance) (OR: 0.25, 95% CI: 0.12–0.53) | ||
| Shamsuddin 2005 [S130] | Quasi–experimental study involving community, home–based administration of magnesium sulfate to diagnosed eclamptic and severe eclamptic cases prior to referral to hospital, compared to control cases who did not receive injections | Decrease | 256 cases from 3 districts in Bangladesh, 133 in intervention and 132 in control, over 6 months in 2001 | Decreased number of mean convulsions in the intervention cases (4.7 ± SD2.64) compared to control cases (6.86 ± SD 2.97) ( | ||
CI – confidence interval, SD – standard deviation, OR – odds ratio, PPH – postpartum hemorrhage, NS – not (statistically) significant, RR – rate ratio
*For assessments that analyzed maternal morbidity as a primary outcome indicator. The full references are shown in Appendix S1 in Online Supplementary Document.
†Significant results indicated in bold font.
‡PPH defined in each assessment as blood loss ≥500 mL; severe PPH defined in each assessment as blood loss ≥1000 mL.
§Chi–square test of difference between control and intervention.