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. 2017 Aug 31;17:264. doi: 10.1186/s12884-017-1446-x

Table 1.

Studies detailing interventions promoting awareness of women’s rights for maternity care services with reported specified health outcomes (N = 4)

# Study Study type and quality Document type Setting Nature of intervention/initiative/project Reported health outcomes
1 Pandey, Sehfal, Roboud, Levine & Goyal 2007 -Cluster randomized trial -Strong quality Journal article Uttar Pradesh, India Study in 105 village clusters across 21 districts; Intervention with 22,495 households in 55 village clusters across 11 districts 4–6 public meetings during two visits spaced 2 weeks apart to disseminate information about entitled health and education services and village governance ANC increase
2 Bjorkman & Svensson 2009 -Cluster randomized trial -Moderate quality Journal article Uganda Rural Uganda, 4 regions, 9 districts; Study included 50 communities. Intervention with approximately 55,000 households in 25 communities A community score card process with a week of meetings when communities and health facility staff review local priorities and action plans and agree on contracts monitored by communities, revisited in meetings 6 months later ANC increase (not statistically significant) Facility delivery increase
3 Ganju, Khanna, Taparia & Hardikar 2014 -Participatory action research -Weak quality Newsletter article Gujarat, India Intervention with 10,374 people in 12 villages in two districts Over 2 years local volunteers visit families and prospectively fill a monitoring tool for every woman once during pregnancy and once during post-partum. A report card is developed to dialogue with different stakeholders and support local action. ANC increase Facility delivery increase
4 Sinha 2008 -Pre- and post-intervention design -Weak quality Working paper Andhra Pradesh, India Intervention with approximately 40,000 people in 37 villages and poor area of headquarter village in 1 district; Over 15 months awareness raising and community support for pregnant women through local government and youth committees; involvement of their families through monthly meetings; and home visits by a community organizer who worked with families to create a birth preparedness plan and support access to care. ANC increase Facility delivery increase