A brief survey to identify pregnant women experiencing increased psychosocial and socioeconomic risk.

Women Birth

Centre for Community Child Health, The Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia; Population Health, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia; Department of Paediatrics, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3052, Australia.

Published: June 2019

Problem: Identifying pregnant women whose children are at risk of poorer development in a rapid, acceptable and feasible way.

Background: A range of antenatal psychosocial and socioeconomic risk factors adversely impact children's health, behaviour and cognition.

Aim: Investigate whether a brief, waiting room survey of risk factors identifies women experiencing increased antenatal psychosocial and socioeconomic risk when asked in a private, in-home interview.

Methods: Brief 10-item survey (including age, social support, health, smoking, stress/anxious mood, education, household income, employment) collected from pregnant women attending 10 Australian public birthing hospitals, used to determine eligibility (at least 2 adverse items) for the "right@home" trial. 735 eligible women completed a private, in-home interview (including mental health, wellbeing, substance use, domestic violence, housing problems). Regression models tested for dose-response trends between the survey risk factor count and interview measures.

Findings: 38%, 31%, 15% and 16% of women reported a survey count of 2, 3, 4 and 5 or more adverse risk factors, respectively. Dose-response relationships were evident between the survey count and interview measures, e.g. of women with a survey count of 2, 8% reported ever having a drug problem, 4% experienced domestic violence in the last year and 10% experienced housing problems, contrasting with 31%, 31% and 26%, respectively, for women reporting a survey count of 5 or more.

Discussion/conclusions: A brief, waiting room survey of psychosocial and socioeconomic risk factors concurs with a private antenatal risk factor interview, and could help health professionals quickly identify which women would benefit from more support.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2018.08.162DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

psychosocial socioeconomic
16
socioeconomic risk
16
risk factors
16
survey count
16
pregnant women
12
survey
9
women
9
risk
9
women experiencing
8
experiencing increased
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!