| Literature DB >> 28977308 |
Maria de Fátima Costa Caminha1, Suzana Lins da Silva2, Marília de Carvalho Lima3, Pedro Tadeu Álvares Costa Caminha de Azevedo4, Maria Cristina Dos Santos Figueira4, Malaquias Batista2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe Brazil's historical background with regard to child development surveillance and perform a systematic review of studies published on surveillance records of child development within Child Health Handbooks. DATA SOURCES: A literature review was conducted in April of 2016 in the following electronic databases: Latin American and Caribbean Literature in Health Sciences (LILACS), the Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO), and the Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (Medline). The search did not have any language or publication period restrictions, and included the bibliographic references of the selected articles. The keywords "child development and child health records," and "child development and child health handbook" were applied. Articles were included that were original and that evaluated the use of child development surveillance tools in Brazil. Publications that were not original were excluded. The articles were selected first based on their title, then their abstracts, and finally a thorough reading. DATA SYNTHESIS: The recommendation to support child development surveillance has been occurring since 1984. In 1995, developmental milestones were included in the Child's Health Handbook, and in 2004 they became normative acts for surveillance, which should be carried out using this booklet. In the systematic review, six articles were selected in which the prevalence of child development surveillance recording ranged from 4.6 to 30.4%. This variation was due to different criteria and sample sizes as well as different methodologies employed to analyze the adequacy of filling out the handbook.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28977308 PMCID: PMC5417801 DOI: 10.1590/1984-0462/;2017;35;1;00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Paul Pediatr ISSN: 0103-0582
Final results of studies included in the systematic revision about child development surveillance in the Child Handbook or Child Health Handbook in Brazil starting in 2005.
| Authors | Place and year | Age, statistic criteria, and sample sizes | Criteria for appropriate form filling | Attendance record (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palombo et al. | BHU in a municipality of São Paulo, SP, 2013 | <3 years. Estimated 50% of children with inadequate food; 3,904 children recorded in BHU. Confidence level of 95% and an error of 5%, 350 necessary, 185 were analyzed. | Not explained | 7.0 |
| Abud e Gaíva | Vaccination campaign in Cuiabá, MT, 2011 | <1 year. Stratified random sample covering 60% of the units drawn in health regions. Of 63, 38 unites were randomly selected. It included all children attended during the day of the vaccination campaign. 929 children were analyzed. | ≥2 items filled out according to the current age of the child | 4.6 |
| Ceia e Cesar | BHU in Pelotas, RS, 2009 | <1 year. Sample based on 4,000 live births in Pelotas in 2007. 90% prevalence of attendance in child care, a precision of +3 and including 350 children. A random drawing of the 50 BHU, selecting aprioristically half: 19 (of 37) in the urban area and seven (of 13) in rural areas. 365 mirror-chips were analyzed. | Not explained | 6.0 |
| Da Costa et al. | Household in two municipalities in Piauí, 2008 | <5 years. Appropriate form filling percentage of 22% of the handbook, 4% error, 95% confidence level, power of 80%, reason for no treatment: treated from 1:9 (income distribution), the outcome prevalence between untreated from 30% and risk ratio of 2.0. 263 necessary. 342 children were analyzed. | Regardless of whether it’s updated or not | 30.4 |
| Alves et al. | Vaccination campaign in Belo Horizonte, MG, 2006 | Seven to 16 months. Based on the number of live births in Belo Horizonte from May of 2005 to January of 2006: 22,311. 65% form filling frequency, error of 5%, 95% IC, sample of 344 children. Distributed among the nine health regions based on the proportion of live births. In each region, two BHU were randomly selected and estimated to have completed more than 200 vaccine doses in <1 year on the day of vaccination in June of 2005. Interviewed the odd numbers of eligible mothers in order of arrival in each of the 18 BHU. 355 children analyzed. | ≥3 assessment records | 18.9 |
| Vieira et al. | Vaccination campaign in Feira de Santana, BA, 2001 | <1 year. Casual simple random sample of 62 units used for vaccination, 22 selected randomly. 2,191 children analyzed. | Notes corresponding to the child’s age | 7.8 |
BHU: Basic Health Unit; IC: confidence interval.