View clinical trials related to Antenatal Care.
Filter by:Iron and folic acid (IFA) supplements are currently provided to Cambodian women during pregnancy. However, recent research has showed benefit of a multiple micronutrient supplement (MMS) over just IFA alone on several outcomes of perinatal and infant health. The Ministry of Health in Cambodia has proposed a transition from IFA to MMS but would like to collect some formative research on this first to assess acceptability and adherence to MMS (over IFA) and help guide key messaging, packaging, and practices to guide the transition in Cambodia.
Antenatal care (ANC) is a critical measure to reduce maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. However, there are issues of too many visits and cumbersome procedures of ANC in many maternity hospitals of China. In the past year, the COVID-19 pandemic has brought huge impacts on the health systems, but also gives a valuable chance to review healthcare delivery strategies. Reduced-visit antenatal care models combined with remote monitoring have been recommended and implemented at most hospitals in China during the pandemic, particularly for low-risk pregnant women. However, due to limited evaluations of the cost-effectiveness, policymakers remain confused on how to appropriately integrate online delivery strategies with routine models to improve ANC quality and efficiency sustainably at scale. This is a single-blind, randomized controlled trial, conducted among low-risk pregnant women at Peking University Third Hospital in Beijing, to evaluate the effectiveness, acceptability, and cost of a reduced-visit ANC model combined with online monitoring compared to the routine ANC model. Participants will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive 12 routine ANC visits or the new ANC model consist of 9 outpatient visits and three online services with remote monitoring on their weight, heart rate, blood pressure, urinary protein, blood glucose, and fetal movement. CSOG-recommended ANC services will be provided to all participants. According to the study objectives and hypotheses, the primary outcome is adverse maternal and perinatal outcomes for non-inferiority analysis, and the secondary outcomes are acceptability and cost for superiority analysis.