October, 2016 - SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review | print this article | download PDF

Does group antenatal care improve outcomes for women and their babies?

Antenatal care is one of the key preventive health services used around the world, usually involving one-to-one visits with a care provider (midwife, obstetrician or general practitioner). Group antenatal care is a potentially useful alternative strategy.

Key messages

  • In high-income countries, group compared to individual antenatal care probably reduces the number of preterm births, while having little or no effect on the number of low birthweight and small for gestational age newborns; and it may have little or no effect on perinatal mortality.
  • The applicability of the findings of this review to low-income countries is uncertain.
  • The effects, costs and cost-effectiveness of group antenatal care should be evaluated in large randomized trials in low-income countries.

 

Background

In most Western countries, antenatal care traditionally involves a schedule of one-to-one visits with a care provider. A different way of providing antenatal care is through a group model. Group antenatal care is provided by midwives or obstetricians in groups of eight to 12 women of similar gestational age. The groups meet eight to 10 times during pregnancy for antenatal care, with sessions running for 90 to 120 minutes. With group care there is 12 to 20 hours of accumulated care, compared with two to three hours with conventional antenatal care. Antenatal care integrates the usual antenatal assessment with information, education and peer support. It usually does not include continuity through labour, birth and the postpartum period.


About the systematic review underlying this summary

Review objectives:To compare the effects of group antenatal care versus one-to-one care on outcomes for women and their babies.
Type of What the review authors searched for What the review authors found
Study designs & interventions Randomised and nonrandomised trials of group antenatal care
4 randomised trials were included
Participants Pregnant women accessing antenatal care
Pregnant women receiving antenatal care at public (3 studies) and military clinics (1 study)
Settings Hospital, clinics or any settings delivering antenatal care worldwide
USA (2 studies), Iran (1 study), Sweden (1 study)
Outcomes

Primary: Preterm births, low birthweight, small-for-gestational age, perinatal mortality

Secondary: Maternal satisfaction, breastfeeding, length of hospital stay, infant Apgar scores, mode of birth, induction of labour, analgesia/anaesthesia use in labour, attendance at antenatal care, care provider satisfaction, cost-effectiveness, etc.

 


Primary: Preterm births (3 studies), low birthweight (3 studies), small for gestational age (3 studies), perinatal mortality (3 studies)

Secondary: admission of baby to neonatal intensive care unit (2 studies), breastfeeding initiation (3 studies), spontaneous vaginal birth (1 study), etc.

Date of most recent search: October 2014
Limitations: This is well-conducted systematic review with only minor limitations.

Catling-Paull CJ, Medley N, Foureur M, et al. Group versus conventional antenatal care for women. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2015, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD007622.

Summary of findings

Four trials involving a total of 2350 women were included in the review. One study was conducted at two university-affiliated hospital antenatal clinics in the USA. The second study was conducted in antenatal clinics at two military settings in the USA. The third study was conducted in health centres in Iran, and the fourth study was conducted in antenatal clinics in Sweden.

All of the included studies followed CenteringPregnancy principles. CenteringPregnancy is an approach to antenatal care by which care is provided to groups of eight to 12 women. Physical assessments are undertaken as an individual assessment alongside the group to maintain privacy. Groups integrate the usual antenatal assessment with information, education and peer support. Emphasis is placed on engaging women more fully in their own health assessments.


  • In high-income countries, group antenatal care probably reduces the number of preterm births, while having little or no effect on the number of low birthweight and small for gestational age newborns. The certainty of this evidence is moderate.
  • In high-income countries, group antenatal care may have little or no effect on perinatal mortality. The certainty of this evidence is low.

 

Group antenatal care versus individual antenatal care (adjusted data) for women

People                Pregnant women accessing prenatal care

Settings               2 trials were located in the USA, 1 in Iran and 1 in Sweden

Intervention        Group antenatal care

Comparison         Individual antenatal care

Outcomes

Absolute effect*

Relative effect

(95% CI)

Certainty

of the evidence

(GRADE)

Without
Group antenatal care

With
Group antenatal care

Difference

(Margin of error)

Preterm birth

(gestational age at time of birth less than 37 weeks' gestation)

105

per 1000

79

per 1000

RR 0.75

(0.57 to 1)

Moderate

Difference: 26 fewer per 1000 births

(Margin of error: 45 to 0 fewer)

Low birthweight

(<2500 g)

89

per 1000

82

per 1000

RR 0.92

(0.68 to 1.23)

Moderate

Difference: 7 fewer per 1000 births

(Margin of error: 29 fewer to 20 more)

Small for gestational age

(less than the 10th percentile for gestation and gender)

104

per 1000

96

per 1000

RR 0.92

(0.68 to 1.24)

Moderate

Difference: 8 fewer per 1000 births

(Margin of error: 33 fewer to 25 more)

Perinatal mortality

(stillbirth or neonatal death)

21

per 1000

14

per 1000

RR 0.63

(0.32 to 1.25)

Low

Difference: 7 fewer per 1000 births

(Margin of error: 14 fewer to 6 more)

Margin of error = Confidence interval (95% CI) RR: Risk ratio GRADE: GRADE Working Group grades of evidence (see above and last page)

* The risk WITHOUT the intervention is based on the average risk across studies. The corresponding risk WITH the intervention (and the 95% confidence interval for the difference) is based on the overall relative effect (and its 95% confidence interval).

Relevance of the review for low-income countries

None of the included studies were from low-income countries.
Findings Interpretation*
APPLICABILITY
None of the included studies were from low-income countries.
The effects of group antenatal care might be affected by differences in funding models, the health workforce, and characteristics of the women receiving care. Consequently, the applicability of the findings of this review to low-income countries is uncertain.
EQUITY
The review did not report any data regarding differential effects of group antenatal care on disadvantaged populations.
Group antenatal care might reduce inequities, if it increased access to care for underserved populations. However, the review does not provide any data to support or refute this conjecture.
ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS
None of the included studies reported costs or cost-effectiveness data.
The cost and cost-effectiveness of group antenatal care compared to conventional care are uncertain.
MONITORING & EVALUATION
In high-income countries, group antenatal care probably reduces the number of preterm births, while having little or no effect on the number of low birthweight and small for gestational age newborns.

The effects, costs and cost-effectiveness of group antenatal care in low-income countries are uncertain.

The effects, costs and cost-effectiveness of group antenatal care should be evaluated in large randomized trials in low-income countries.


*Judgements made by the authors of this summary, not necessarily those of the review authors, based on the findings of the review and consultation with researchers and policymakers in low-income countries. For additional details about how these judgements were made see: www.supportsummaries.org/methods


 

Additional information

Related literature

Dowswell T, Carroli G, Duley L, et al. Alternative versus standard packages of antenatal care for low-risk pregnancy. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2015, Issue 7. Art. No.: CD000934.

Rising S, Powell Kennedy H, Klima C. Redesigning prenatal care through CenteringPregnancy. Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health 2004;49(5):398-404.

Patil CL, Abrams ET, Klima C, Kaponda CP, Leshabari SC, Vonderheid SC, et al. CenteringPregnancy-Africa: A pilot of group antenatal care to address Millennium Development Goals. Midwifery. 2013;29(10):1190-8. PubMed PMID: 23871278.

 

This summary was prepared by

Agustín Ciapponi, Instituto de Efectividad Clínica y Sanitaria, Buenos Aires, Argentina

 

Conflict of interest

None declared. For details, see: www.supportsummaries.org/coi

 

Acknowledgements

This summary has been peer reviewed by: Christine Catling and Dorothy Oluoch.

 

This review should be cited as

Catling CJ, Medley N, Foureur M, et al. Group versus conventional antenatal care for women. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2015, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD007622.

 

The summary should be cited as

Ciapponi A. Does group antenatal care improve outcomes for women and their babies? October 2016. www.supportsummaries.org

 

Keywords

 

evidence-informed health policy, evidence-based, systematic review, health systems research, health care, low and middle-income countries, developing countries, primary health care,

infant, low birth weight, newborn, peer group, pregnancy, premature birth, antenatal care

 



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