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Effect of Home Visiting by Nurses on Maternal and Child Mortality
- Source :
- JAMA Pediatrics. 168:800
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- American Medical Association (AMA), 2014.
-
Abstract
- Mothers and children living in adverse contexts are at risk of premature death.To determine the effect of prenatal and infant/toddler nurse home visiting on maternal and child mortality during a 2-decade period (1990-2011).A randomized clinical trial was designed originally to assess the home visiting program's effect on pregnancy outcomes and maternal and child health through child age 2 years. The study was conducted in a public system of obstetric and pediatric care in Memphis, Tennessee. Participants included primarily African American women and their first live-born children living in highly disadvantaged urban neighborhoods, who were assigned to 1 of 4 treatment groups: treatment 1 (transportation for prenatal care [n = 166]), treatment 2 (transportation plus developmental screening for infants and toddlers [n = 514]), treatment 3 (transportation plus prenatal/postpartum home visiting [n = 230]), and treatment 4 (transportation, screening, and prenatal, postpartum, and infant/toddler home visiting [n = 228]). Treatments 1 and 3 were included originally to increase statistical power for testing pregnancy outcomes. For determining mortality, background information was available for all 1138 mothers assigned to all 4 treatments and all but 2 live-born children in treatments 2 and 4 (n = 704). Inclusion of children in treatments 1 and 3 was not possible because background information was missing on too many children.Nurses sought to improve the outcomes of pregnancy, children's health and development, and mothers' health and life-course with home visits beginning during pregnancy and continuing through child age 2 years.All-cause mortality in mothers and preventable-cause mortality in children (sudden infant death syndrome, unintentional injury, and homicide) derived from the National Death Index.The mean (SE) 21-year maternal all-cause mortality rate was 3.7% (0.74%) in the combined control group (treatments 1 and 2), 0.4% (0.43%) in treatment 3, and 2.2% (0.97%) in treatment 4. The survival contrast of treatments 1 and 2 combined with treatment 3 was significant (P = .007); the contrast of treatments 1 and 2 combined with treatment 4 was not significant (P = .19), and the contrast of treatments 1 and 2 combined with treatments 3 and 4 combined was significant (post hoc P = .008). At child age 20 years, the preventable-cause child mortality rate was 1.6% (0.57%) in treatment 2 and 0.0% (SE not calculable) in treatment 4; the survival contrast was significant (P = .04).Prenatal and infant/toddler home visitation by nurses is a promising means of reducing all-cause mortality among mothers and preventable-cause mortality in their first-born children living in highly disadvantaged settings.clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00708695.
- Subjects :
- Male
Child abuse
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Urban Population
Child Health Services
Child Welfare
Poison control
Prenatal care
Nurses, Community Health
Article
law.invention
Randomized controlled trial
Pregnancy
law
medicine
Humans
Maternal Health Services
Toddler
Child
Survival analysis
business.industry
Mortality rate
Pregnancy Outcome
Infant
medicine.disease
Survival Analysis
Tennessee
Black or African American
House Calls
Maternal Mortality
Child, Preschool
Child Mortality
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Female
business
Follow-Up Studies
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21686203
- Volume :
- 168
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- JAMA Pediatrics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....df9284d60acaa596ac4f1db75ce1b7da
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.472