Belizan 1995.
Methods | Randomised controlled trial of psychosocial support in pregnancy which aimed to improve maternal health, including reducing smoking during pregnancy. Conducted in 4 countries in Latin America (Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, and Mexico) from January 1989 to March 1991. |
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Participants |
Inclusion criteria:High‐risk women whose AN care began at 15‐22 weeks' gestation, singleton pregnancy, 1 or more of the following: prior LBW infant; preterm birth; perinatal/infant death; < 18 years; body weight <= 50 kg; height <= 150 cm; low family income (local definitions applied); < 3 years school; crowded household (4 or more persons/bedroom); smoking; not living with husband or partner.
Exclusion criteria: Heart or renal failure; diastolic BP > 100 mmHg; history of cervical cerclage; Rh negative; mental disease or any chronic disease that might interfere with pregnancy. Recruitment: 2235 women met eligibility criteria and gave consent (I = 1115‐though 1110 in table, C = 1120). Baseline characteristics: Smokers (I = 23.9%, C = 21.8%), with variation between countries ‐ Argentina (I = 21.9%, C = 20.6%), Brazil (I = 40.7%, C = 33.1%), Cuba (I = 27.4%, C = 28.9%), Mexico (I = 9%, C = 6.8%). Mean cigarettes per day at randomisation: C = 7.9, I = 7.5. Progress + coding: Low SES based on place of residence (low family income 20% in Cuba, 52% in Mexico, 53% in Brazil and 100% in Argentina). |
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Interventions |
Control: Routine AN care, otherwise unspecified. Intervention: Flexible use of a standardised manual, based on site‐specific ethnographic studies of needs, fears, expectations, social support networks, including detailed descriptions of situations likely to occur during home visits. 4 to 6 home visits of 1 to 2 hours with emphasis on psychosocial support, education on health habits including better nutrition, reducing smoking alcohol and other drugs, reducing their physical workload, recognition of alarm signs and symptoms, improved access to hospital facilities, reinforcement of health service utilisation. Additional components were a poster, a booklet, hotline to project office, guided tour of hospital, encouragement of family support and participation. Intervention was provided by specially trained female social workers or obstetric nurses with previous experience of childbirth. Main intervention strategy: Maternal health intervention with smoking component: social support (tailored) compared with UC. Intensity: Frequency (C = 0, I = 6), Duration (C = 0, I = 5). UC frequency and duration = 0 (unclear). Intervention provided by study team: efficacy study. |
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Outcomes | Self‐reported point prevalence abstinence at 36 weeks' gestation (late pregnancy*); Mean cigarettes per day.* Multiple perinatal and maternal health outcome data were collected, but not included in this review as other aspects of the intervention may have had an impact. Baseline state anxiety score and associations with other factors. |
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Notes | Sample size was planned for the primary trial objective. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Centrally prepared, method not stated. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Allocation was by opening sealed, opaque envelopes. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | High risk | Attrition 202/2230 (9%): 101 in each arm. Unclear what attrition among smokers and no ITT analysis of dropouts as continuing smokers, so not able to re‐include smokers who dropped out in this review. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | None apparent. |
Other bias | Low risk | No other bias detected. |
Biochemical validation of smoking abstinence (detection bias) | High risk | No biochemical validation of reported smoking behaviour. |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) All outcomes | High risk | Home visitors were aware of group allocation. Social support intervention with home visits. |
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | The evaluation of the interventions was conducted by a team of independent professional interviewers who were not informed of the characteristics of the study. |
Incomplete implementation | Low risk | Most (83%) of the women randomly assigned to the intervention group received the planned number of home visits, and 90% were visited at least once. |
Equal baseline characteristics in study arms | Low risk | The distribution of risk factors was similar in the 2 groups and the 2 groups had similar demographic, obstetric, and psychological characteristics at baseline. |
Contamination of control group | Low risk | The clinic personnel were unaware of the identity of the women in the control group, and no attempts were made to inform them of which women were in the intervention group. Health educators providing intervention were separate from care providers. |