| Literature DB >> 30674306 |
Meertien K Sijpkens1, Sabine F van Voorst2, Lieke C de Jong-Potjer2, Semiha Denktaş2,3,4, Arnoud P Verhoeff5,6, Loes C M Bertens2, Ageeth N Rosman2, Eric A P Steegers2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preconception care has been acknowledged as an intervention to reduce perinatal mortality and morbidity. However, utilization of preconception care is low because of low awareness of availability and benefits of the service. An outreach strategy was employed to promote uptake of preconception care consultations. Its effect on the uptake of preconception care consultations was evaluated within the Healthy Pregnancy 4 All study.Entities:
Keywords: Health behavior; Health care utilization; Implementation; Preconception care; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30674306 PMCID: PMC6343258 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-3882-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Flowchart Healthy Pregnancy 4 All preconception care strategy and study
Overview of the outreach of the outreach approaches and uptake of PCC
| Intervention | Outreach | Uptake | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Outreach approach | Number of municipalities that adopted the approach | Number reached by the approach | Number of PCC applications indicating this approacha |
| Municipal letters | 7/10 | 110,199 letters | 338 |
| GP letters | 10/10 | 21,930 letters | 95 |
| Child healthcare leaflets | 8/10 | unknown no. of leaflets | 6 |
| Peer health education | 7/10 | 147 sessions; 1796 participants | 1 |
Uptake was registered between February 2013 and the end of December 2014, following the implementation of a outreach approach per municipality
aDoes not count up to the total number of 587 PCC applications due to missing data, overlap and other reported approaches
Fig. 2Participant enrollment in the cohort study
“Predisposing, enabling and need” characteristics of participants of the cohort
| Socio-demographic characteristics ( | Number* | (%)* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Median age in years | (min–max) | 30 | (19–41) |
| (IQR) | (27–34) | |||
| Ethnicityb | Dutch | 145 | (63.3) | |
| Civil status | Married or living together | 178 | (77.1) | |
| In a relationship, not living together | 32 | (13.8) | ||
| Not in a relationship | 21 | (9.1) | ||
| Educational attainmentc | Low | 18 | (7.8) | |
| Intermediate | 84 | (36.5) | ||
| High | 121 | (52.6) | ||
| Other – foreign education | 7 | (3.1) | ||
| Occupational status | No paid job | 53 | (22.8) | |
| Monthly household income ( | Low (< 1500€) | 46 | (21.7) | |
| Middle (1500–2500€) | 65 | (30.7) | ||
| High (> 2500€) | 101 | (47.6) | ||
| Attitude and knowledge about PCC | ||||
| Barriers summaryd (max 25) | Median score (IQR) | 12 | (11–14) | |
| Beliefs summarye (max 45) | Median score (IQR) | 37 | (35–45) | |
| Knowledge summaryf (max 8) | Median score (IQR) | 6 | (5–7) | |
| Pregnancy and preconception health characteristics | ||||
| Pregnancy intention | Currently pregnant | 4 | (1.8) | |
| Within next 3 months | 114 | (50.4) | ||
| Within next 3–6 months | 59 | (26.1) | ||
| After > 6 months or maybe no intention | 49 | (21.7) | ||
| Subfertility | Current or previous fertility treatment | 21 | (9.0) | |
| Previous pregnancy | Yes | 69 | (29.2) | |
| Adverse pregnancy outcomesg | Miscarriage | 23 | (33.3) | |
| Abortion | 22 | (31.9) | ||
| Low birth weight baby (< 2500 g) | 7 | (10.1) | ||
| Child with congenital abnormalities | 3 | (4.3) | ||
| Preterm birth (< 37 weeks) | 4 | (5.8) | ||
| Perinatal mortality | 1 | (1.5) | ||
| Preconception lifestyle risks | No folic acid supplementation | 83 | (35.6) | |
| Smoking | 30 | (12.9) | ||
| Alcohol consumption ≥1/week | 51 | (22.2) | ||
| Illicit drug use | 6 | (2.6) | ||
| No daily vegetables or fruit consumption | 66 | (28.4) | ||
| Self-rated healthh | Moderate – poor | 24 | (10.3) | |
*Unless stated otherwise
a.In case of > 5% missing on an item, the number of participants that responded to the question is provided
b.Self-defined ethnicity
c.Educational attainment level was defined as the highest completed educational level classified according to the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) i.e. low (level 0–2: early childhood; primary education; lower secondary education); intermediate (level 3–5: upper secondary; post-secondary; short cycle tertiary); and high (level 6–8: bachelor; master; doctoral). Unesco institute for statistics 2014
d.Median sum score of five questions on attitude and potential barriers for uptake of PCC (minimum 5 – maximum 25). High score indicates high level of potential barriers. N = 214
e.Median sum score of nine questions on beliefs regarding PCC (minimum 9 – maximum 45). High score indicates positive attitude. N = 215
f.Median sum score of eight questions on knowledge of PCC risk factors (minimum 0 – maximum 8). High score indicates good knowledge. N = 220
g.Adverse pregnancy outcomes are presented as women who have experienced ≥1 time(s) specified outcomes
hSelf-rated health was questioned as: How would you in general rate your health? (excellent-very good-good-moderate-poor)
Fig. 3Reasons to apply for a PCC consultation. Participants could choose multiple reasons; three participants did not give any reason (n = 234)