| Literature DB >> 30601847 |
Olivia Magwood1, Victoire Kpadé1, Kednapa Thavorn2,3,4, Sandy Oliver5,6, Alain D Mayhew1, Kevin Pottie1,7.
Abstract
Home-based records (HBRs) may improve the health of pregnant women, new mothers and their children, and support health care systems. We assessed the effectiveness of HBRs on maternal, newborn and child health reporting, care seeking and self-care practice, mortality, morbidity and women's empowerment in low-, middle- and high-income countries. We conducted a systematic search in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL, Health Systems Evidence, CINAHL, HTA database, NHS EED, and DARE from 1950 to 2017. We also searched the WHO, CDC, ECDC, JICA and UNAIDS. We included randomised controlled trials, prospective controlled trials, and cost-effectiveness studies. We used the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool to appraise studies. We extracted and analyzed data for outcomes including maternal, newborn and child health, and women's empowerment. We synthesized and presented data using GRADE Evidence Profiles. We included 14 studies out of 16,419 identified articles. HBRs improved antenatal care and reduced likelihood of pregnancy complications; improved patient-provider communication and enhanced women's feelings of control and empowerment; and improved rates of vaccination among children (OR: 2·39, 95% CI: 1.45-3·92) and mothers (OR 1·98 95% CI:1·29-3·04). A three-year follow-up shows that HBRs reduced risk of cognitive delay in children (p = 0.007). HBRs used during the life cycle of women and children in Indonesia showed benefits for continuity of care. There were no significant effects on healthy pregnancy behaviors such as smoking and consumption of alcohol during pregnancy. There were no statistically significant effects on newborn health outcomes. We did not identify any formal studies on cost or economic evaluation. HBRs show modest but important health effects for women and children. These effects with minimal-to-no harms, multiplied across a population, could play an important role in reducing health inequities in maternal, newborn, and child health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30601847 PMCID: PMC6314587 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Certainty of evidence and definitions.
| Certainty rating | Definition |
|---|---|
| High | Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect |
| Moderate | Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate |
| Low | Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate |
| Very low | Any estimate of effect is very uncertain |
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study design | Study setting | Study population | Sample size | Intervention | Comparator | Outcomes of interest | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bjerkeli Grøvdal et al. 2006 | RCT | 10 municipalities in More and Romsdal county in Norway with 14 child health centers, both urban and rural. | Children six weeks to five years old born between 1 August 2000 and 1 October 2001. | 309 | Parent-held child health record (including appointments, vaccinations, steps in child development, room for both health personnel and parents to make notes) in addition to the ordinary national health surveillance program. | Ordinary national health surveillance program | Parent-professional collaboration, healthcare utilization, and parents’ |
| Elbourne et al. 1987 | RCT | Peripheral consultant clinic. Newbury, West Berkshire, England. | Women less than 34 weeks gestation who booked for antenatal care with E.H. at the peripheral clinic at the Sandleford Hospital, Newbury between 1 January and 30 June 1984. | 247 | Woman-held obstetric records | Co-operation card (abbreviated version of the full obstetric record) | Patient satisfaction, patient control, communication with health providers, number of antenatal classes, smoking, duration of labor, baby's father's involvement, breastfeeding, likelihood of depression, use of analgesia, and savings of clerical resources |
| Homer et al. 1999 | RCT | Australian metropolitan maternity service | English-speaking women attending the hospital clinic for their first antenatal visit between January to December 1997. | 126 | Woman-held antenatal record | Co-operation card (abbreviation of the full antenatal record) | Feeling of control and women's satisfaction during pregnancy |
| Lakhani et al. 1984 | Randomized controlled evaluation | St Thomas's Hospital, London, England. | Mothers resident in the West Lambeth | 299 | Home-based child health record booklet. The booklet contained spaces for a photograph; name; birth statistics; four address changes; important names and telephone numbers, developmental mile-stones; and a schedule and record of immunization and developmental assessment clinic attendance. | No intervention for the period of May to August 1980. In September 1980, it had been decided that booklets would be distributed to all mothers in the district. | Relationship between parents and professionals, communication between professionals, health education, and continuity of care |
| Lovell et al. 1987 | RCT | Antenatal clinic in St. Thomas’s Hospital, London, England. | Mothers attending the antenatal clinic between 20 June to 7 November 1984. | 228 | Woman-held maternity case notes | Co-operation card (abbreviated version of full record). Mothers in this group handled their full maternity notes while waiting to be seen in the antenatal clinic and thus had access to their contents during this time. | Satisfaction with the |
| Moore et al. 2000 | Randomized controlled two-phase trial. | Education Department within Leicestershire county, England. | Children with severe and obvious disabilities referred from the local Education Department | 71 | Personal child health record for children with a disability, as a supplement to the Leicestershire child health record. New section included pages for recording contact info of child's healthcare professionals, space for child's medical diagnoses and medications, appointment logs, diary of achievements, info about organizations relevant to children with disabilities | No intervention (usual care) | Usability, value, perception of health care received, communication between the family and healthcare professional |
| Mori et al. 2015 | Cluster randomized controlled trial | 18 units (16 | Pregnant women and their infants living in the Bulgan province of Mongolia between May 2009 and September 2010. | 501 | Maternal and Child Health handbook containing a log for recording information on maternal health and personal information, course of pregnancy, delivery and postpartum health, weight during and after pregnancy, dental health, parenting classes, child development milestones from the ages of 0–6 years, immunization and illnesses, and height and weight charts for children. | No intervention for the period of the original trial. In 2010 the MCH handbook was implemented as part of the national health policy. | |
| 386 | Risk of cognitive developmental delay | ||||||
| Osaki et al. 2018 | Cluster randomized controlled trial | 13 health centers in Garut district of rural Java, Indonesia. | Pregnant women attending one of the selected health centers between 2007 and 2009. | 454 | Maternal and Child Health Handbook documenting and monitoring services provided and a point-of-care information resource. | No intervention (usual care) | Maternal immunization, antenatal clinic appointments, vitamin A intake, feeding practices, child growth and development. |
| Shaw et al. 2008 | RCT | Maternity Centre of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. | Women presenting to a primary care maternity center before 28 week’s gestation between September 2004 and January 2006. | 106 | Access to a website with pregnancy health information and access to their own antenatal health record, through a condensed version of the clinic’s antenatal care planner. This planner contained information and reminders generated by the presence of any of the following risk factors: being a current smoker, having a history of premature labor, having a history of previous Caesarean section, being Rh negative, or being over 35 years of age at the time of delivery. The website with pregnancy health information gave information on labor and delivery, integrated prenatal screening, nutrition, smoking cessation, local community resources, tests during pregnancy, sexuality, and postpartum contraception. | Access to website with pregnancy information only, giving information on labor and delivery, integrated prenatal screening, nutrition, smoking cessation, local community resources, tests during pregnancy, sexuality, and postpartum contraception. | Frequency of use, satisfaction with and perceived usefulness of web-based information |
| Stille et al. 2001 | Controlled trial | 3 inner-city pediatric primary care sites in Hart- | Infants born in any hospital in Hartford between October 1997 and May 1998 who presented for their first well-child visits and 1 or the 3 sites under 28 days of age, whose primary caregiver spoke English or Spanish. | 315 | Routine information about immunizations and received a 2- component intervention. | Routine information about immunizations | Immunization status of 3-dose DTP vaccination. |
| Usman et al. 2009 | RCT | EPI centers in urban areas of Karachi city, Pakistan. | Children visiting the selected EPI centers for DTP1 and residing in the same area for the last 6 months. | 1461 | Redesigned immunization card and/or center-based education session. The redesigned card was a new and simpler immunization card whose most important function was to act as a constant reminder to mothers for next immunization visit. The larger immunization card (15.5cm×11.5cm when folded) showed only the next immunization date and day on both outer sides in Microsoft Word font 42. The remainder of the information such as name of the EPI center, card number, card’s date of issue, child’s name and address, complete immunization schedule dates, and instructions and information for the mother was written on the inner sides of the folded card. The center-based education was a 2–3 min conversation with mother to convey the importance of the completion of immunization schedule and to explain the potential adverse impact of incomplete immunization on child’s health. | Old EPI immunization card. It is small (9 x 8.5 cm, when folded); hence, the information on child’s identity, immunization schedule, information for mothers and next immunization visit dates is crowded together and appears disorderly. And the next immunization date is hand-written by the EPI staff, often in very small and irregular letters. | Immunization status of 3-dose DTP vaccination. |
| Usman et al. 2011 | RCT | 6 EPI centers in the rural peripheries of Karachi, Pakistan. | Children visiting the selected EPI centers for DTP1 and residing in the same area for the last 6 months. | 1506 | Redesigned immunization card and/or center-based education session. The redesigned card was a new and simpler immunization card whose most important function was to act as a constant reminder to mothers for next immunization visit. The larger immunization card (15.5cm×11.5cm when folded) showed only the next immunization date and day on both outer sides in Microsoft Word font 42. The remainder of the information such as name of the EPI center, card number, card’s date of issue, child’s name and address, complete immunization schedule dates, and instructions and information for the mother was written on the inner sides of the folded card. The center-based education was a 2–3 min conversation with mother to convey the importance of the completion of immunization schedule and to explain the potential adverse impact of incomplete immunization on child’s health. | Old EPI immunization card. It is small (9 x 8.5 cm, when folded); hence, the information on child’s identity, immunization schedule, information for mothers and next immunization visit dates is crowded together and appears disorderly. And the next immunization date is hand-written by the EPI staff, often in very small and irregular letters. | Immunization status of 3-dose DTP vaccination. |
| Yanagisawa et al. 2015 | Pre-post intervention controlled trial | Health centers located in Kampong Cham Province, Cambodia. | Women who had given birth 1 year prior to the survey living in an intervention or control area. | 640 | Maternal and Child Health Handbook | Standard Cambodian Child Health Card (child growth card) and Mother Health Record. Also received the tetanus immunization card and the vitamin A intake record | Maternal behaviours including antenatal attendance, deliveries attended by SBAs and deliveries at health facilities). Secondary outcomes included maternal knowledge of danger signs during pregnancy and delivery, prevention of anaemia, prevention of intestinal parasites, mother-to-child HIV transmission, early breastfeeding practice and child immunization |
Fig 2Risk of Bias summary.
Review authors' judgements (Low, Unclear and High) about each risk of bias item for each individual study using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool.
Fig 3Meta-analysis of childhood vaccination (DTP) series completion among individuals using HBRs as compared to no HBR (1.1.1) or existing EPI cards (1.1.2).