| Literature DB >> 30364289 |
Patrick L F Zuber1, Allisyn C Moran2, Doris Chou3, Françoise Renaud4, Christine Halleux5, Juan Pablo Peña-Rosas6, Kavitha Viswanathan7, Eve Lackritz8, Robert Jakob9, Elizabeth Mason10, Smaragda Lamprianou1, Christine Guillard-Maure1.
Abstract
Pregnant women and their babies are among the populations most vulnerable to untoward health outcomes. Yet current standards for evaluating health interventions cannot be met during pregnancy because of lack of adequate evidence. The situation is even more concerning in low-income and middle-income countries, where the need for effective interventions is the greatest. Meeting the Sustainable Development Goals for health will require strengthened attention to maternal and child health. In this paper we examine ongoing initiatives aimed at improving the assessment of maternal interventions. We review current methodologies to monitor outcomes of maternal interventions and identify where harmonisation is needed. Based on this analysis we identify settings where different minimal data sets should be considered taking into consideration the clinical realities. Stronger coordination mechanisms and a roadmap to support harmonised monitoring of maternal interventions across programmes and partners, working on improving pregnancy and early childhood health events, will greatly enhance ability to generate evidence-based policies.Entities:
Keywords: maternal health; public health; vaccines
Year: 2018 PMID: 30364289 PMCID: PMC6195154 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Main characteristics of MedDRA and ICD terminologies. ICD, International Classification of Diseases; ICH, International Council on Harmonisation; MedDRA, Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities.
Issues related to the measurement of four pregnancy and early childhood health outcomes
| Abortion | Congenital anomalies | Stillbirth | Preterm birth | |
| Circumstances affecting identification | Time after conception. | Very large number of conditions. | Masking postnatal death into stillbirth. | Contraception methods can affect identification of last menstrual period. |
| Data elements required for confirmation | Gestational age. | Vary with condition. | Gestational age. | Gestational age. |
| Clinical variations | Late abortions have different aetiology. | External anomalies more likely to be promptly recognised. | Accuracy of definition depends on gestational age accuracy. | Contraception methods can affect identification of last menstrual period. |
| Applicability in different types of studies | Few clinical trials include first trimester pregnancies. | MedDRA and ICD used for surveillance. | Retrospective studies and surveillance depend on availability of ICD codes. | Prospective studies allow for accurate measurement. |
| Aspects that require further testing and review | Gestational age assessment method and cut-off methodology. | Access to the infant. All available terminologies need to be evaluated in different settings. | Gestational age cut-off methodology. | Determination of gestational age in low-resource settings. |
ICD, International Classification of Diseases; MedDRA, Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities.