(Press-News.org) Every year, 300,000 pregnant women and 2,600,000 newborn babies are estimated to die worldwide, and more than 99% of these deaths occur in developing countries. Effective interventions to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality are critically needed, and an ongoing challenge for researchers and health professionals is finding the best way to deliver these interventions in resource-limited settings such as Mongolia. Antenatal visits can provide the first opportunity to deliver these interventions. Now, a new study has shown that Japan's flagship intervention, the Maternal and Child Health Handbook, helped to increase antenatal care visits, identify complications earlier in pregnancy and reduce passive smoking in Mongolia.
The study is available online on 9th April in the journal PLOS ONE. Dr Rintaro Mori, Director of Health Policy at the National Center for Child Health and Development (NCCHD) in Japan, led an international collaborative team of researchers from the NCCHD, the Ministry of Health in Mongolia and other institutes in Japan to conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial of the Maternal and Child Health Handbook in Bulgan, Mongolia.
The Handbook was first implemented in Japan in 1947 and has since developed into an effective tool to enhance client-provider communication about health, raise health awareness, identify complications earlier in pregnancy, and promote antenatal care visits. Other countries have also adopted the Handbook in recent years. This cluster-randomised trial of the translated Handbook was conducted between 2009 and 2010 to assess its effectiveness in promoting antenatal care attendance in Bulgan, Mongolia.
Pregnant women were recruited from 18 randomly allocated districts in Bulgan. The Handbook was implemented immediately for women at their first antenatal visit in the intervention group, and nine months later in the control group. In Mongolia, the national standard for antenatal care is a minimum of 6 visits. In this study, 82% of women in the intervention group attended antenatal clinics 6 times or more compared to 71% of women in the control group. Of the women who received the Handbook, 89% of women attended the standard number of antenatal care visits or more. Socioeconomic status affected the frequency of clinic attendance: women of higher socioeconomic status visited antenatal clinics more often. Pregnancy complications were 2.5 times more likely to be detected among women using the Handbook, and half of family members stopped smoking at home, thereby reducing the harm of passive smoking for expectant mothers.
D. Atarmaa, Deputy Minister at Ministry of Health and Sports commented "The Maternal and Child Health Handbook is well known among health professionals and parents of Mongolia as a "Pink" book, and is being used to monitor health of pregnant women and children. Initially the handbook was used in Bulgan aimag but now is being used one of the essential documents in the primary health settings in Mongolia. The handbook has a significant contribution to improve maternal and child health by increasing involvement of parents, raising health awareness and enhancing communication between health providers and pregnant women."
Based upon the results of this trial, the Maternal and Child Health Handbook was implemented as a national policy in Mongolia. The Handbook's role in enhancing long-term information sharing via increased antenatal clinic attendance can make a valuable contribution to maintaining Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 in developing countries.
INFORMATION:
Mori R, Yonemoto N, Noma H, Ochirbat T, Barber E, Soyolgerel G, Nakamura Y, Lkhagvasuren O (2015) The Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Handbook in Mongolia: A Cluster-Randomized, Controlled Trial. PLoS ONE 10(4): e0119772. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0119772
Contact details:
For comment or interview, please contact: Rintaro Mori: Tel: +81 (3) 3416 0181, email: mori-r@ncchd.go.jp
Press officer: Daisuke Yoshida: Tel: +81 (3) 3416 0181, email: sato-tr@ncchd.go.jp
The question if humans can communicate via pheromones in the same way as animals is under debate. Cell physiologists at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum have demonstrated that the odorous substance Hedione activates the putative pheromone receptor VN1R1, which occurs in the human olfactory epithelium. Together with colleagues from Dresden, the Bochum-based researchers showed that the scent of Hedione generates sex-specific activation patters in the brain, which do not occur with traditional fragrances. "These results constitute compelling evidence that a pheromone effect ...
Well intentioned, but costly and potentially problematic. That's how researchers describe the end result of a decision by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to regulate colchicine, a drug used to treat gout, among other ailments. Fewer patients are actually now taking it, and it has come at a cost to their wallets, says study leader Aaron Kesselheim of Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Harvard Medical School in the US. The findings¹ appear in the Journal of General Internal Medicine,² published by Springer.
Colchicine had been sold at low cost for many ...
Shakespeare is such a towering literary figure that any new insight into the man, or his work, tends to generate a jolt of excitement in academic and non-academic communities of Shakespeare aficionados. Applying psychological theory and text-analyzing software, researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have discovered a unique psychological profile that characterizes Shakespeare's established works, and this profile strongly identifies Shakespeare as an author of the long-contested play Double Falsehood.
The findings are published in Psychological Science, a journal ...
The dispersant used to remediate the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is more toxic to cold-water corals than the spilled oil, according to a study conducted at Temple University. The study comes on the eve of the spill's fifth anniversary, April 20th.
In this collaborative study between researchers from Temple and the Pennsylvania State University, the researchers exposed three cold-water coral species from the Gulf to various concentrations of the dispersant and oil from the Deepwater Horizon well. They found that the dispersant is toxic to the ...
April 9, 2015 - A wealth of studies have shown that violent video games contribute to antisocial and aggressive behavior. But what makes those games appealing in the first place?
One possibility is that storytelling plays a role, particularly if it lets players engage in meaningful choices.
A new study suggests that non-violent video games that capitalize on such storytelling have prosocial benefits that could ultimately be helpful to clinical disorders such as autism.
"The motivation to engage in and enjoy video games corresponds with principals that apply to ...
Scientists at the University of York have discovered a potential new treatment for prostate cancer using low temperature plasmas (LTPs).
Published in the British Journal of Cancer (BJC), the study is the first time LTPs have been applied on cells grown directly from patient tissue samples. It is the result of a unique collaboration between the York Plasma Institute in the Department of Physics and the Cancer Research Unit (CRU) in York's Department of Biology.
Taking both healthy prostate cells and prostate cancer tissue cells from a single patient, the study allowed ...
FROSTBURG, MD (April 9, 2015)--Nitrogen fertilizers make it possible to feed more people in the world than ever before. However, too much of it can also harm the environment. Professor Eric Davidson, director of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science's Appalachian Laboratory, has been leading a group of scientists, economists, social scientists, and agriculture experts in figuring out how to produce more food while lowering pollution at the same time. He calls it a "Mo Fo Lo Po": more food, low pollution.
"The main objective is to produce abundant, ...
MINNEAPOLIS/ST.PAUL (4/9/15) - Research published in the open access journal Microbiome offers new evidence for the success of fecal microbial transplantation (FMT) in treating severe Clostridium difficile infection (CDI), a growing problem worldwide that leads to thousands of fatalities every year.
Research led by Michael Sadowsky, Alex Khoruts, and colleagues at the University of Minnesota in collaboration with the Rob Knight Lab at the University of Colorado, Boulder, reveals that healthy changes to a patient's microbiome are sustained for up to 21 weeks after transplant, ...
After decades in ornithological obscurity, one of the world's least-known birds is finally coming to light thanks to the persistence of a small group of researchers. Pablo Negret, Oscar Garzón, Pablo Stevenson, and Oscar Laverde-R. of the Universidad de los Andes have just published the results of their year-long study of the Black Tinamou (Tinamus osgoodi hershkovitzi) in The Auk: Ornithological Advances, including new ecological information as well as some of the first video and sound recordings of this elusive species.
The Black Tinamou is a chicken-sized bird ...
A simple test of the number of fish living on a coral reef can be used as a roadmap to restore degraded reefs and fishers' livelihoods according to a global study published in the journal Nature.
An international team of marine scientists surveyed more than 800 coral reefs worldwide to develop a diagnostic test of reef health.
"By studying remote and marine protected areas, we were able to estimate how many fish would be on a coral reef without fishing, and how long it should take newly protected areas to recover," says study lead author, Dr Aaron MacNeil from the ...