Evidence Based Paediatrics and Child Health

2001 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-95
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Yu-Lien Maldonado ◽  
Julia J. Songok ◽  
John W. Snelgrove ◽  
Christian B. Ochieng ◽  
Sheilah Chelagat ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: We launched Chamas for Change (Chamas), a group-based health education and microfinance program for pregnant women and their infants, to address inequities contributing to high rates of maternal and neonatal mortality in western Kenya. In this prospective matched cohort study, we evaluated the association between Chamas participation and uptake of evidence-based, maternal, newborn and child health (MNCH) behaviors. Methods: We prospectively compared the uptake of MNCH behaviors between a cohort of Chamas participants and controls matched for age, parity, and prenatal care location. Between October-December 2012, government-sponsored community health volunteers (CHV) recruited pregnant women attending their first antenatal care (ANC) visits at health facilities in Busia County to participate in Chamas . Women enrolled in Chamas agreed to attend bi-monthly group health education and optional microfinance sessions for 12 months. We collected baseline sociodemographic data at study enrollment for each cohort. We used descriptive analyses and adjusted multivariable logistic regression models to compare outcomes across cohorts at 6-12 months postpartum, with α set to 0.05. Results: Compared to controls (n=115), a significantly higher proportion of Chamas participants (n=211) delivered in a facility with a skilled birth attendant (84.4% vs. 50.4%, p<0.001), attended at least four ANC visits (64.0% vs. 37.4%, p<0·001), exclusively breastfed to six months (82.0% vs. 47.0%, p<0·001), and received a CHV home visit within 48 hours postpartum (75.8% vs. 38.3%, p<0·001). In our adjusted models, Chamas participants were nearly five times as likely as controls to deliver in a health facility (OR 5.07, 95% CI 2.74-9.36, p<0.001). Though not statistically significant, Chamas participants experienced a lower proportion of stillbirths (0.9% vs. 5.2%), miscarriages (5.2% vs. 7.8%), infant deaths (2.8% vs. 3.4%), and maternal deaths (0.9% vs. 1.7%) compared to controls. Our sensitivity analyses revealed no significant difference in the odds of facility delivery based on microfinance participation. Conclusions: Chamas participation was associated with increased practice of evidence-based MNCH health behaviors among pregnant women in western Kenya. Our findings demonstrate this program’s potential to achieve population-level MNCH benefits; however, a larger study is needed to validate this observed effect.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Partha Saha

To reduce inequity in maternal and child health care indicators among socio-economically different regions, strategic location-specific policies should be designed. In this research work, a knowledge-discovery-based interactive decision support system has been developed on a web platform which would assist health care policymakers to design evidence-based decisions. Two modules have been prepared under this system to find out key influential Maternal and Child Healthcare (MCH) interventions for socio-economically different regions which had high impact on health care indicators. Data of 284 districts of nine high-focus states of India have been provided into the system to find out the efficiency of the system. Those data have been collected from district- level household survey part three (DLHS-3). The first module of the system has segregated all 284 districts into three segments based on their educational, social and economic conditions, and the second module has found out key influential health care interventions for all three segments separately which had high impact on health care indicators. It has been observed that adolescent health care intervention like female sterilization and childhood health care interventions such as DPT (diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus) vaccine and measles vaccine were key influential health care interventions. The improvement of coverage of these interventions would help to reduce inequity and improve health care indicators of regions. Further research should be done to understand how the coverage of these interventions can be improved, especially in socio-economically poor regions.


2008 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 152-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane E. Hirst ◽  
Heather E. Jeffery ◽  
Jonathan Morris ◽  
Kirsty Foster ◽  
Elizabeth J. Elliott

2011 ◽  
Vol 45 (spe2) ◽  
pp. 1810-1816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Cowley

There is increasing interest in the early years as a focus for reducing health inequalities as well as one that is important for the children themselves. This paper describes the introduction in England of Sure Start Local Programmes, which included home visiting within a community development approach, and an intensive home visiting programme, the Nurse-Family partnership, for disadvantaged teenage mothers. It reflects on changes and challenges in service provision to mothers and their pre-school children in England, explaining that a long tradition of home visiting was, paradoxically, reduced as attention focused on the newer initiatives. This is now being addressed, with attention to a range of evidence based programmes and a specific focus on heath visitor provision.


2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-240
Author(s):  
Mary Rudolf

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