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What matters to women: a systematic scoping review to identify the processes and outcomes of antenatal care provision that are important to healthy pregnant women
Author(s) -
Downe S,
Finlayson K.,
Tunçalp Ӧ,
Metin Gülmezoglu A
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/1471-0528.13819
Subject(s) - psychological intervention , autonomy , pregnancy , competence (human resources) , medicine , nursing , psychology , health care , medical education , family medicine , social psychology , biology , political science , law , genetics , economics , economic growth
Background Global uptake of antenatal care ( ANC ) varies widely and is influenced by the value women place on the service they receive. Identifying outcomes that matter to pregnant women could inform service design and improve uptake and effectiveness. Objectives To undertake a systematic scoping review of what women want, need and value in pregnancy. Search strategy Eight databases were searched (1994–2015) with no language restriction. Relevant journal contents were tracked via Zetoc. Data collection and analysis An initial analytic framework was constructed with findings from 21 papers, using data‐mining techniques, and then developed using meta‐ethnographic approaches. The final framework was tested with 17 more papers. Main results All continents except Australia were represented. A total of 1264 women were included. The final meta‐theme was: Women want and need a positive pregnancy experience , including four subthemes: maintaining physical and sociocultural normality; maintaining a healthy pregnancy for mother and baby (including preventing and treating risks, illness and death); effective transition to positive labour and birth ; and achieving positive motherhood (including maternal self‐esteem, competence, autonomy). Findings informed a framework for future ANC provision, comprising three equally important domains: clinical practices (interventions and tests); relevant and timely information; and pyschosocial and emotional support; each provided by practitioners with good clinical and interpersonal skills within a high quality health system. Conclusions A positive pregnancy experience matters across all cultural and sociodemographic contexts. ANC guidelines and services should be designed to deliver it, and those providing ANC services should be aware of it at each encounter with pregnant women. Tweetable abstract Women around the world want ANC staff and services to help them achieve a positive pregnancy experience.

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