Int J Public Health

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Colombia

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Sandra Milena Montoya-Sanabria; Sandra Milena Montoya-Sanabria; Dauris Lineth Mejia-Pérez; María Teresa Domínguez-Torres; Angélica María Zapata-Matheus; Catalina González-Uribe; Yesika Tatiana Hernández-Sandoval; Hong Lien Nguyen; Juan José Yepes-Nuñez; Sergio Augusto Cáceres-Maldonado; Amaila De La Torre-Arias; Diana Catalina Díaz-Barrero; Yuldor Eduardo Caballero-Diaz
2023-04-20 相关链接

摘要

Objective: To identify and assess the effect of community-based Knowledge Translation Strategies (KTS) on maternal, neonatal, and perinatal outcomes. Methods: We conducted systematic searches in Medline, Embase, CENTRAL, CINAHL, PsycInfo, LILACS, Wholis, Web of Science, ERIC, Jstor, and Epistemonikos. We assessed the certainty of the evidence of the studies using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) framework. Results: We identified seven quantitative and seven qualitative studies. Quantitative findings suggest that there is a possible effect on reducing maternal mortality (RR 0.65; 95% CI, 0.48-0.87; moderate evidence certainty); neonatal mortality (RR 0.79; 95% CI 0.70-0.90; moderate evidence certainty); and perinatal mortality (RR 0.84; 95% CI 0.77-0.91; moderate evidence certainty) in women exposed to KTS compared to those who received conventional interventions or no intervention at all. Analysis of qualitative studies identified elements that allowed to generate benefit effects in improving maternal, neonatal, and perinatal outcomes. Conclusion: The KTS in maternal, neonatal, and perinatal outcomes might encourage the autonomy of communities despite that the certainty of evidence was moderate.

GRADE approach; ; knowledge translation; ; maternal and child health; ; maternal health; ; meta-analysis;; neonatal health;; neonatal mortality;; systematic review

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