| Literature DB >> 30041661 |
Carol Kingdon1, Soo Downe2, Ana Pilar Betran3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is continued debate about the role of women and communities in influencing rising rates of caesarean section (CS). In settings where CS rates exceed recommended levels, mothers and babies are exposed to potential harms that may outweigh the potential benefits. There is therefore a need to understand how educational interventions targeted at women and communities to reduce unnecessary CS are perceived and used. This qualitative evidence synthesis aimed to explore what women and communities say about the barriers and facilitators to intervention effectiveness for these important groups.Entities:
Keywords: Birth method; Caesarean section; Decision-aids; Educational interventions; Women’s views
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30041661 PMCID: PMC6057083 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-018-0570-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Summary of included studies and quality assessment
| Author | Intervention | Country and region | Setting | Number of participants | Type of participants | Robson Groups | Method | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McCants [ | Prebirth educational brochure. | USA, Americas | Urban | 16 | Non-pregnant women | Communitya | In-depth interviews | C |
| Shorten [ | Internet-based decision aid about birth choices after previous caesarean developed from an earlier paper-based decision aid. | USA, Americas | Urban | 9 | Pregnant women | 5 | Semi-structured Interviews | B |
| Ramvi [ | Women who took part in a team Midwifery intervention referred because they requested a caesarean because of fear of birth and actually had a vaginal birth. | Norway, European | Urban | 5 | Postnatal women | 1–5 | In-depth interviews | A |
| Basso [ | Problematizing educational intervention with groups of pregnant women and partners comprising eight face-to-face sessions. | Brazil, Americas | Urban | 51 | Pregnant women and partners | 1 and 2 | Convergent Care study | A |
| David [ | Dedicated next birth after caesarean telephone helpline manned by midwives to promote safe and successful vaginal birth in a subsequent pregnancy. | Australia, Western Pacific | Unclear | 170 | Pregnant women | 5 | Content analysis | C |
| Milne [ | Decision board comprising decisional aids that provide a standardized base of written and graphic evidence-based information about vaginal and caesarean birth. | Canada, Americas | Urban | 40 | Non-pregnant women | Communitya | Semi-structured interviews | C |
| Frost [ | Two computer decision aids (an information programme and an individualised decision analysis programme) | UK, European | Urban | 30 | Pregnant women | 5 | Semi-structured interviews | B |
| Farnworth [ | Informational DVD/video and a home visit by a midwife | UK, European | Urban | 18 | Pregnant women | 5 | Semi-structured interview | B |
| Emmett [ | Two decision aids (an information programme and an individualised decision analysis programme) | UK, European | Urban | 26 | Pregnant and postnatal women | 5 | Semi-structured interview and observation | B |
| Wang [ | Web-based education program for vaginal birth after caesarean | Taiwan, Western Pacific | Urban | 10 | Postnatal women | 5 | Telephone interviews | C |
| Shorten [ | Birth choices booklet: Development, preliminary evaluation and pilot. | Australia, Western Pacific | Urban | 21 | Pregnant women | 5 | Questionnaire booklet with open questions | C |
| Cleeton [ | Suzanne Arms’ 1998 videotape | USA, Americas | Sub-Urban | 65 | Non-pregnant women and male students | Communitya | Questionnaire with open questions | B |
a Community defined as men and women of reproductive age but not currently pregnant to best of author’s knowledge
CERQual summary of findings table
| Review finding | Contributing studies |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Theme 1: Mutability of women’s and community’s beliefs about birth: Ambivalence, Empowerment and Fear | |||
| [ | High confidence high-income countries and moderate confidence for whole review population | 12 studies with minor methodological limitations. Rich data from 7 countries across 3 geographical regions with highest rates of unnecessary caesarean section. No or very minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 7 studies, 4 of which had very minor methodological limitations. Data from Europe and the Americas only. Very minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 9 studies with minor methodological limitations. Sufficiently rich data from 7 countries across 3 geographical regions with highest rates of unnecessary caesarean section. No or very minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 7 studies with minor methodological limitations. Fairly rich data from USA, UK, Taiwan and Norway. Minor concerns about coherence. | |
| Theme 2: Multiplicity of birth information needs: Framing, format and individual management strategies | |||
| [ | Moderate confidence | 10 studies with minor methodological limitations. Fairly rich data 7 countries across 3 geographical regions with highest rates of unnecessary caesarean section. No or very minor concerns about coherence with the other 2 studies not attending to this issue. | |
| [ | High confidence high-income countries and moderate confidence for whole review population | 11 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 6 countries across 3 geographical regions. Very minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 7 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 3 countries (UK, USA, Taiwan) across three geographical regions. Moderate concerns about adequacy and coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 7 studies with minor methodological limitations. Fairly rich data from 5 countries (UK, USA, Australia, Norway and Taiwan). 6 of the 7 studies involved pregnant or post-natal women faced with the gravity of the actual decision-made. | |
| Theme 3: Interactions with health professionals and influence of healthcare system: Support, consistency and autonomy | |||
| [ | Moderate confidence | 10 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 7 countries across 3 geographical regions with richest data from European settings. Minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 8 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 4 countries across 3 geographical regions. No or very minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 9 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 7 countries across 3 geographical regions. Minor concerns about coherence. | |
| [ | Moderate confidence | 10 studies with minor methodological limitations. Data from 7 countries across 3 geographical regions. Moderate concerns about coherence. | |