| Literature DB >> 32296554 |
Maria Regina Torloni1, Vanessa Brizuela2, Ana Pilar Betran2.
Abstract
Introduction: The worldwide increase in unnecessary caesarean sections (CSs) is a major global health issue. Mass media campaigns have been used in several countries to reduce this trend. The objectives of this systematic review were to identify, critically appraise and synthesise the findings, including the barriers and enablers, of mass media campaigns directed at lay people to reduce unnecessary CS.Entities:
Keywords: health education and promotion; maternal health; obstetrics; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32296554 PMCID: PMC7146028 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Main characteristics of seven mass media campaigns to reduce unnecessary CS
| South America | 3 | Argentina, Brazil, Chile |
| Central America | 1 | Puerto Rico |
| Europe | 2 | Cyprus, Italy |
| Asia | 1 | Iran |
| Yes | 1 | Iran |
| No | 6 | Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cyprus, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Yes | 1 | Iran |
| No | 1 | Brazil |
| Unclear/ no information | 5 | Argentina, Chile, Cyprus, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Reproductive age & pregnant women | 1 | Italy |
| General public | 6 | Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cyprus, Iran, Puerto Rico |
| Direct* | 2 | Argentina, Brazil |
| Indirect† | 7 | Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cyprus, Iran, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Both | 2 | Argentina, Brazil |
| Written material | 3 | Cyprus, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Radio | 1 | Argentina |
| TV (open, paid, or close-circuit) | 4 | Argentina, Cyprus, Italy, Iran |
| Internet and social media | 5 | Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Yes | 4 | Argentina, Chile, Cyprus, Puerto Rico |
| No | 3 | Brazil, Iran, Italy |
| range (min-max) | 7 days - 34 months | |
| less than 1 month | 2 | Argentina, Iran |
| 1–11 months | 2 | Chile, Cyprus |
| 12–34 months | 2 | Brazil, Italy |
| Unclear/ No information | 1 | Puerto Rico |
| None | 5 | Argentina, Chile, Cyprus, Italy, Puerto Rico |
| Knowledge about CS / VD | 2 | Brazil, Iran |
| Attitude toward CS /VD | 2 | Brazil, Iran |
| Preference for CS / VD | 2 | Brazil, Iran |
*Use of interpersonal contact (face-to-face presentations, performance and group discussions).
†Use of mass media channels (such as TV or newspaper).
CS, caesarean section; TV, television; VD, vaginal delivery.
Main barriers and enablers of seven mass media campaigns to reduce unnecessary caesarean section
| Barriers | Enablers |
| 1. Lack of human resources and time for volunteers to create campaign (Cyprus and Chile). | 1. Involvement of communication professionals to design campaign (Brazil). |
| 2. Lack of institutional support (Chile). | 2. Support from ministry of health to allow public servants to develop the campaign during working hours (Cyprus). |
| 3. Lack of funding (Chile). | 3. Volunteer participation of celebrities in television spots (Cyprus and Argentina). |
| 4. Difficulties of volunteers to organise meetings and plan campaigns (Chile). | 4. Volunteer work of professionals in production of good quality videos (Cyprus). |
| 5. Difficulties in finding key persons who would help with creation at no cost (Cyprus). | 5. Support of other non-governmental organisations (Argentina). |
| 1. Lack of funding to transport and display exhibit (Brazil). | 1. Trained mediators to help participants get in touch with their senses and emotions (Brazil). |
| 2. Lack of local political support to promote campaign (Brazil). | 2. Use of art to affect the sensibility of participants, to touch their hearts and not only their rational side (Brazil). |
| 3. Finding key persons who would help with dissemination without charging (Cyprus). | 3. Participation of entertainment celebrities (actresses and singers) in promotional material (Chile and Argentina). |
| 4. Opposition of professional societies, authorities and universities to a campaign that was not created by them (Chile). | 4. Avoidance of controversies and dissociation of campaign from extremist/radical groups initiatives or views (Chile and Argentina). |
| 5. Hesitancy of women to accept campaign’s message due to prevailing belief that medicalised births are safer for mother and baby (Chile). | 5. Enthusiasm and good will of volunteers in promoting campaign (Chile). |
| 6. Lack of funding for dissemination (Chile) and assessment of outcomes/effects of campaign (Argentina). | 6. Good relationships with the key media stakeholders (Italy). |
| 7. No charge from owners of communication channels to disseminate campaign spots (Argentina). | |
Assessment of effects of seven mass media campaigns to reduce unnecessary CS
| Characteristics | Argentina | Brazil | Chile | Cyprus | Iran | Italy | Puerto Rico (2012–2013) |
| Outcomes assessed | None | Preference for CS. Knowledge of risks/benefits of CS. Opinion on VD. | None | None | Knowledge about childbirth. Attitude towards VD and CS. Intended route of delivery. | None | None |
| Period of outcome assessment | NA | Immediately after exhibit | NA | NA | 10 days after exposure | NA | NA |
| Sample assessed | NA | Preference for CS: n=1933 general public and n=1287 pregnant women. Knowledge of risks/benefits of CS: n=1933 general public and n=1287 pregnant women. Opinion about VD: n=17 501 visitors. | NA | NA | 466 pregnant women (194 had seen the TV spot; 272 had not seen it). All women had no previous CS, were mostly in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy, and attending antenatal care in public and private clinics in Teheran | NA | NA |
| Tool used to assess effect | NA | Written questionnaires immediately before and after the exhibit | Written questionnaires before and after TV campaign | ||||
| Effects | NA | Decrease in preference for CS (14.7%×10.4%, p=0.006). Increase in good/very good knowledge about CS risks (50.5%×71.5%, p<0.001). Decrease in opinion that VD was very bad or bad (12.2%×1.9%, p<0.001). | NA | NA | Changes in 194 women exposed to campaign: Increase in knowledge scores (p=0.008). Increase in attitude scores towards VD (p=0.05). Decrease in intention to deliver by CS (39.2%×24.7%, p=0.004). No changes in attitude scores towards CS. | NA | NA |
CS, caesarean section; NA, not applicable; TV, television; VD, vaginal delivery.
Main objectives and messages of media campaigns to reduce unnecessary CS
| Country | Objectives | Messages |
| Argentina | Raise awareness about unnecessary CS. | Say ‘no’ to unnecessary CS. Women who deliver vaginally are an endangered species. |
| Brazil | Increase the public’s knowledge. Promote cultural change to value normal birth. Reduce rates of CS and unnecessary interventions during childbirth. | VD is an important and positive experience for women and children. VD is good for the health of women and children. Think critically about CS rates in Brazil. |
| Chile | Avoid unnecessary CS. Promote respectful necessary CS. Promote the use of Lamaze recommendations for a physiological birth. | In Chile, there is an excess of CS without any medical indication. Birth is a physiological event that only rarely requires obstetric interventions like a CS. Follow Lamaze recommendations for a physiological birth (eg, wait for spontaneous onset of labour, continuous support during labour and avoid lithotomy position for delivery). |
| Cyprus | Inform and raise awareness about the mind and body benefits of normal childbirth for families and its impact on society. Strengthen and support couples’ rights to choice in childbirth. Empower midwives and support their role in normal childbirth. Improve national perinatal indicators. | Say ‘yes’ to VD. VD is the best choice for women, babies and families. VD empowers women and midwives. VD leads to stronger families and stronger society and improves health outcomes for all citizens. |
| Iran | Persuade pregnant women to choose spontaneous VD instead of unnecessary CS. | Give birth naturally to guarantee your own health, that of the baby and of the next generation. |
| Italy | Raise awareness and foster action of authorities and women to reduce unnecessary CS in the country. Inform women about the indications and risks of CS. Disseminate and promote WHO's policies to achieve optimal CS rates. | A CS is a life-saving surgical procedure that should be used when complications occur. For most women, giving birth should be a natural event. Mode of birth is your choice and should be discussed with your healthcare provider. |
| Puerto Rico | Prevent and reduce unnecessary CS and other unnecessary interventions during labour, delivery and the postpartum period. Empower Puerto Rican women to face the increasing rates of unnecessary CS as a public health issue. Promote and foster humanised births as the safest and heathiest option for delivery. | You decide, be the protagonist and take charge (of your own birth). CS is a major surgery with risks for mothers and babies. Pregnancy, delivery and the postpartum period are natural events, not diseases that require medical interventions. Humanised childbirth is beneficial for the health of mothers and babies. |
CS, caesarean section; VD, vaginal delivery.
Main characteristics of the creation and implementation of seven mass media campaigns to reduce unnecessary caesarean section
| Characteristics | Argentina | Brazil | Chile | Cyprus | Iran | Italy | Puerto Rico |
| Main creator | NGO (RELACAHUPAN | Minas Gerais Federal University and Belo Horizonte Health Department | NGO (RELACAHUPAN Chile) | Council of Midwives Committee | Multiprofessional expert panel | NGO (ONDa), WHO, National OB-GYN Association and female parlamentarians | Student association, Puerto Rico University Public Health School |
| Authorities involved in creation/support of campaign | No | Local health department, MoH and local professional association | No | National and local professional association and MoH | No | WHO, National Professional Association and parliamentarians | No |
| Main funding | Mama Cash (international feminist organisation) and voluntary work (for dissemination) | International, national and local scientific funding agencies, MoH and PAHO | Mostly voluntary work | Mostly voluntary work | Iran University of Medical Science | WHO Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health | NI |
| Type of intervention | Part of multicomponent intervention | Part of multicomponent intervention | Isolated intervention | Isolated intervention | Isolated intervention | Part of multicomponent intervention | NI |
| Design | |||||||
| Theory used | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | NI |
| Formative research | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Communication experts involved | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | NI |
| Pretesting | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | NI |
| Target public | General public | General public | General public | General public | General public | Women | General public |
| Medium | |||||||
| Type of communication | Direct: group discussions in hospitals/public spaces | Direct: itinerant exhibition | Indirect: five video clips posted on Internet channels | Indirect: spot on open TV, posters and pamphlets | Indirect: spot on open TV | Indirect: spot on open and paid TV, internet channels, women’s magazines and pamphlets | Indirect: video, informative posters and pamphlets on internet channels |
| Celebrities involved | Yes (actress) | No | Yes (actresses) | Yes (singer, actresses and first lady) | No | No | Yes (actors, singers and musicians) |
| Intensity | NI | NI | NI | NI | Open TV: 10 consecutive days | Paid TV: 3 times/day, 4 days/1 month. Open TV: 3 times/day, 15 days/1 month | NI |
MoH, ministry of health; NGO, non-governmental organisation; NI, no information; ONDa, National Observatory for Women's Health; PAHO, Pan American Health Organisation; RELACAHUPAN, Red Latinoamericana y del Caribe para la Humanización del Parto y el Nacimiento; TV, television.