| Literature DB >> 35404257 |
Jong Youn Moon1,2, Ichiro Kawachi3, Sarah Soyeon Oh3,4,5, Doukyoung Chon5, Carol Mita6, Jourdyn A Lawrence7, Eun-Cheol Park4,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alcohol consumption in pregnancy has been associated with serious fetal health risks and maternal complications. While previous systematic reviews of digital interventions during pregnancy have targeted smoking cessation and flu vaccine uptake, few studies have sought to evaluate their effectiveness in preventing alcohol consumption during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol; alcohol consumption; computer-based intervention; digital health; digital intervention; fetal alcohol spectrum disorders; fetal alcohol syndrome; internet-based intervention; mHealth; meta-analysis; mobile health; mother; pregnancy; systematic review; text message; text messaging
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35404257 PMCID: PMC9039809 DOI: 10.2196/35554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Figure 1PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flowchart of the literature search.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author | Country | Sample size, n | Mean age (years) | Population sample | Control | Digital intervention | Follow-up assessment |
| Evans et al, 2014 [ | United States | 459 | 26.5 | Pregnant military health care beneficiaries aged 18-45 years presenting for care (>14 weeks’ gestation) | Usual care only | Text4Baby: Text messaging service on nutrition, smoking, taking vitamins, alcohol use, flu shots, health care appointments, health information seeking, and related risk prevention behaviors | 4 weeks (pilot study) |
| Evans et al, 2012 [ | United States | 86 | 27.6 | Pregnant women first presenting for care at the Fairfax County, Virginia Health Department | Usual care only | Text4Baby Pilot: Text messaging service with immediate “just-in-time” tips about prenatal and postpartum health outcomes | 28 weeks of the baby’s gestational age |
| Ingersoll et al, 2018 [ | United States | 71 | 27.8 | Pregnant women | Patient education | CHOICES intervention: Automated internet intervention providing 6 web-based cores of information, videos, and interactive activities (eg, diaries) regarding alcohol-exposed pregnancies | 24 weeks posttreatment |
| Ondersma et al, 2015 [ | United States | 48 | —a | Pregnant women seeking services at a prenatal care clinic affiliated with the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, Michigan | Time-matched (20 minutes) and moderately interactive intervention focused on infant nutrition, with no mention of alcohol use during pregnancy | e-SBI intervention facilitating self-change and/or treatment-seeking through a 20-minute interactive session, using techniques such as education about alcohol-related pregnancies and feedback regarding proactive problem-solving | Postpartum, for the past 90 days (22-23 weeks) |
| van der Wulp et al, 2014 [ | The Netherlands | 258 | 32.6 | Pregnant women seeking services at midwifery practices in the Netherlands | Usual care only | Both computer tailoring internet-based feedback and offline health counseling based on the I-Change model (promote awareness, motivation, and action for behavioral change) | 24 weeks posttreatment |
| Wernette et al, 2018 [ | United States | 50 | 24.4 | Pregnant women visiting a prenatal clinic in a large inner-city hospital | Time- and attention-matched control group (watched segments of popular television shows and received brochures about health risks during pregnancy postintervention) | Computer-delivered single-session brief motivational intervention plus booster session addressing both substance use and sexually transmitted infection risk | 4 months posttreatment |
aNot reported.
Figure 2Effectiveness of digital interventions for preventing alcohol consumption in pregnancy [26,27,29-32].
Figure 3Effectiveness of digital interventions by platform [26,27,29-32].
Figure 4Effectiveness of digital interventions by quality risk of bias [26,27,29-32].
Figure 5Risk of bias summary [26,27,29-32].
Figure 6Funnel plot assessing publication bias.