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孟加拉国 4 个地区的孕产妇营养干预和孕产妇并发症:一项嵌套的横断面研究。

Maternal nutrition intervention and maternal complications in 4 districts of Bangladesh: A nested cross-sectional study.

机构信息

Global Health, Population, and Nutrition, FHI 360, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.

Alive & Thrive Program Office, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

出版信息

PLoS Med. 2019 Oct 4;16(10):e1002927. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002927. eCollection 2019 Oct.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Maternal morbidity is common in Bangladesh, where the maternal mortality rate has plateaued over the last 6 years. Maternal undernutrition and micronutrient deficiencies contribute to morbidity, but few interventions have measured maternal outcomes. We compared reported prevalence of antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum complications among recently delivered women between maternal nutrition intervention and control areas in Bangladesh.

METHODS AND FINDINGS

We conducted a cross-sectional assessment nested within a population-based cluster-randomized trial comparing a nutrition counseling and micronutrient supplement intervention integrated within a structured home-based maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) program to the MNCH program alone in 10 sub-districts each across 4 Bangladesh districts. Eligible consenting women, delivering within 42-60 days of enrollment and identified by community-level health workers, completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire detailing the index pregnancy and delivery and allowed review of their home-based care register. We compared pooled and specific reported antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum complications between study groups using hierarchical logistic regression. There were 594 women in the intervention group and 506 in the control group; overall, mean age was 24 years, 31% were primiparas, and 39% reported facility-based delivery, with no significant difference by study group. There were no significant differences between the intervention and control groups in household-level characteristics, including reported mean monthly income (intervention, 6,552 taka, versus control, 6,017 taka; p = 0.48), having electricity (69.6% versus 71.4%, p = 0.84), and television ownership (41.1% versus 38.7%, p = 0.81). Women in the intervention group had higher recorded iron and folic acid and calcium supplement consumption and mean dietary diversity scores, but reported anemia rates were similar between the 2 groups (5.7%, intervention; 6.5%, control; p = 0.83). Reported antepartum (69.4%, intervention; 79.2%, control; p = 0.12) and intrapartum (41.4%, intervention; 48.5%, control; p = 0.18) complication rates were high and not significantly different between groups. Reported postpartum complications were significantly lower among women in the intervention group than the control group (33.5% versus 48.2%, p = 0.02), and this difference persisted in adjusted analysis (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.51, 95% CI 0.32-0.82; p < 0.001). For specific conditions, odds of retained placenta (AOR = 0.35, 95% CI 0.19-0.67; p = 0.001), postpartum bleeding (AOR = 0.37, 95% CI 0.15-0.92; p = 0.033), and postpartum fever/infection (AOR = 0.27, 95% CI 0.11-0.65; p = 0.001) were significantly lower in the intervention group in adjusted analysis. There were no significant differences in reported hospitalization for antepartum (49.8% versus 45.1%, p = 0.37), intrapartum (69.9% versus 59.8%, p = 0.18), or postpartum (36.1% versus 29.9%, p = 0.49) complications between the intervention and control groups. The main limitations of this study are outcome measures based on participant report, non-probabilistic selection of community-level workers' catchment areas for sampling, some missing data for variables derived from secondary sources (e.g., dietary diversity score), and possible recall bias for reported dietary intake and supplement use.

CONCLUSIONS

Reported overall postpartum and specific intrapartum and postpartum complications were significantly lower for women in intervention areas than control areas, despite similar rates of facility-based delivery and hospitalization for reported complications, in this exploratory analysis. Maternal nutrition interventions providing intensive counseling and micronutrient supplements may reduce some pregnancy complications or impact women's ability to accurately recognize complications, but more rigorous evaluation is needed for these outcomes.

摘要

背景

在孟加拉国,产妇发病率普遍较高,该国的产妇死亡率在过去 6 年中已趋于平稳。产妇营养不良和微量营养素缺乏是发病率的原因之一,但很少有干预措施能衡量产妇的结局。我们比较了最近分娩的妇女在孟加拉国的营养干预和对照地区产前、产时和产后并发症的报告发生率。

方法和发现

我们在一项人群为基础的集群随机试验中进行了一项横断面评估,该试验比较了一种营养咨询和微量营养素补充干预措施,该干预措施与一种结构化的家庭为基础的母婴和儿童保健(MNCH)方案相结合,与 MNCH 方案单独在孟加拉国的 4 个区的每个区的 10 个分区进行比较。合格的同意参与者,在入组后 42-60 天内分娩,并由社区级卫生工作者确定,完成了一份由访谈者管理的问卷,详细描述了索引妊娠和分娩,并允许查看他们的家庭护理登记册。我们使用分层逻辑回归比较了研究组之间的汇总和具体报告的产前、产时和产后并发症。干预组有 594 名妇女,对照组有 506 名妇女;总体而言,平均年龄为 24 岁,31%是初产妇,39%报告在医疗机构分娩,研究组之间没有显著差异。干预组和对照组在家庭层面的特征方面没有显著差异,包括报告的月平均收入(干预组,6552 塔卡,对照组,6017 塔卡;p = 0.48)、是否有电(69.6%对 71.4%,p = 0.84)和是否有电视(41.1%对 38.7%,p = 0.81)。干预组的妇女铁和叶酸以及钙补充剂的摄入量更高,膳食多样性评分也更高,但两组的贫血报告率相似(5.7%,干预组;6.5%,对照组;p = 0.83)。报告的产前(69.4%,干预组;79.2%,对照组;p = 0.12)和产时(41.4%,干预组;48.5%,对照组;p = 0.18)并发症发生率较高,两组之间没有显著差异。干预组产后并发症的报告率明显低于对照组(33.5%对 48.2%,p = 0.02),这一差异在调整分析中仍然存在(调整后的优势比[OR] = 0.51,95%置信区间 0.32-0.82;p < 0.001)。对于特定情况,胎盘残留(OR = 0.35,95%置信区间 0.19-0.67;p = 0.001)、产后出血(OR = 0.37,95%置信区间 0.15-0.92;p = 0.033)和产后发热/感染(OR = 0.27,95%置信区间 0.11-0.65;p = 0.001)的可能性在调整分析中显著降低。干预组和对照组在产前(49.8%对 45.1%,p = 0.37)、产时(69.9%对 59.8%,p = 0.18)和产后(36.1%对 29.9%,p = 0.49)并发症的住院率方面没有显著差异。这项研究的主要限制是基于参与者报告的结果衡量、社区级卫生工作者的抽样捕获区的非概率选择、一些从二级来源(如膳食多样性评分)获得的变量的数据缺失,以及报告的饮食摄入和补充使用的可能回忆偏倚。

结论

在这项探索性分析中,尽管报告的并发症的机构分娩和住院率相似,但在干预地区分娩的妇女的报告的产后和特定产时和产后并发症的总体发生率明显低于对照组。提供强化咨询和微量营养素补充的产妇营养干预措施可能会减少一些妊娠并发症,或影响妇女对并发症的准确识别能力,但需要对这些结果进行更严格的评估。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cc4b/6777761/9aa7a5381849/pmed.1002927.g001.jpg

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