Extended prenatal and postnatal home visits in a vulnerable area in Sweden--a pilot study.
Autor: | Kuo Zhe Chin, Marklund, Bertil, Kylén, Sven, Dalemo, Sofia |
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Předmět: |
PILOT projects
SOCIAL support EVALUATION of human services programs CLINICAL trials HOME care services RURAL conditions ACQUISITION of data HUMAN services programs SOCIOECONOMIC factors SOCIOECONOMIC status RESEARCH funding MEDICAL records CHILD health services AT-risk people SOCIAL classes PRENATAL care POSTNATAL care HEALTH equity LONGITUDINAL method |
Zdroj: | Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care; Dec2023, Vol. 41 Issue 4, p486-494, 9p |
Abstrakt: | Objective: Despite close to all-embracing access to child healthcare, health divides exist among children in Sweden. Home visits to families with new-born babies are a cost-effective way to identify and strengthen vulnerable families. An extended postnatal home visiting programme has been implemented in a disadvantaged suburb in Stockholm with positive results. Design: Longitudinal, prospective study and register study from medical records. Setting: A vulnerable rural area in Sweden. Intervention: A parent advisor from the social services and a midwife performed an extended home visiting programme during the end of pregnancy to mothers of children born between 1 May 2018 and 31 May 2019. During these children's first 15months, three additional home visits were made by a parent advisor and a child healthcare nurse. The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of the intervention on the health of the children and the mothers. Subjects: All firstborn children at the study site (N=30 study, N=55 control group). Main outcome measures: The proportion participating in visits to the child and maternal healthcare services, children being breastfed and receiving childhood vaccinations. Results: There were fewer absentees in the study group during routine check-up visits (93 vs. 84%). More mothers in the study group attended the check-up with the midwives (90 vs. 80%). More children in the study group were breastfed (90 vs. 67%) and received all vaccinations (100 vs. 96%). Conclusion: Supplementing the extended home visiting programme with a visit at the end of pregnancy seems to contribute to fewer absentees at routine visits for both mothers and children; furthermore, more children were breastfed and vaccinated compared with the control group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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