A systematic review of telephone support for women during pregnancy and the early postpartum period.

Cindy-Lee Dennis, Dawn Kingston
Author Information
  1. Cindy-Lee Dennis: Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. cindylee.dennis@utoronto.ca

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of telephone-based support on smoking, preterm birth, low birthweight, breastfeeding, and postpartum depression.
DATA SOURCES: Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group trials register (March 2006), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (March 2006), Medline (1966-2006), EMBASE (1980-2006), and CINAHL (1982-2006). Secondary references were scanned and experts in the field were contacted.
STUDY SELECTION: All published, unpublished, and ongoing randomized controlled trials of telephone support interventions in which the primary aim was smoking, preterm birth, low birthweight, breastfeeding, or postpartum depression were reviewed.
DATA EXTRACTION: Data were independently extracted by both authors and double entered into the Cochrane Collaboration's Review Manager (2003) software.
DATA SYNTHESIS: Trials evaluating different primary outcomes were analyzed separately. For dichotomous data, results were presented as summary relative risk with 95% confidence intervals. For continuous data, weighted mean difference was used.
CONCLUSIONS: Proactive telephone support may (a) assist in preventing smoking relapse, (b) play a role in preventing low birthweight, (c) increase breastfeeding duration and exclusivity, and (d) decrease postpartum depressive symptomatology. No telephone interventions were effective in improving preterm birth or smoking cessation rates. Additional research is encouraged.

MeSH Term

Breast Feeding
Depression, Postpartum
Female
Humans
Infant, Low Birth Weight
Infant, Newborn
Maternal-Child Nursing
Nursing Evaluation Research
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
Patient Education as Topic
Postnatal Care
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications
Pregnancy Outcome
Premature Birth
Prenatal Care
Program Evaluation
Puerperal Disorders
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Research Design
Smoking Prevention
Social Support
Telephone

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0supportsmokingpostpartumtelephonepretermbirthlowbirthweightbreastfeedingDATACochranedepressiontrialsMarch2006TrialsinterventionsprimarydatapreventingOBJECTIVE:assesseffectstelephone-basedSOURCES:PregnancyChildbirthGroupregisterCentralRegisterControlledMedline1966-2006EMBASE1980-2006CINAHL1982-2006SecondaryreferencesscannedexpertsfieldcontactedSTUDYSELECTION:publishedunpublishedongoingrandomizedcontrolledaimreviewedEXTRACTION:DataindependentlyextractedauthorsdoubleenteredCollaboration'sReviewManager2003softwareSYNTHESIS:evaluatingdifferentoutcomesanalyzedseparatelydichotomousresultspresentedsummaryrelativerisk95%confidenceintervalscontinuousweightedmeandifferenceusedCONCLUSIONS:ProactivemayassistrelapsebplayrolecincreasedurationexclusivityddecreasedepressivesymptomatologyeffectiveimprovingcessationratesAdditionalresearchencouragedsystematicreviewwomenpregnancyearlyperiod

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