社区层面青年主导的干预措施改善低收入和中等收入国家孕产妇-新生儿结局:系统评价方案

Tonya MacDonald, Avonae Gentles, Rachel M. Liu, Maya Stevens-Uninsky, Naharin Sultana Anni, N. Rehman, E. Darling, S. Greene, S. Moll, L. Mbuagbaw
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全球范围内,妇女、育龄者和新生儿继续死于与怀孕或分娩有关的可预防原因。持续和加速的努力对于改善孕产妇和新生儿的健康和福祉至关重要。在全球范围内,青年是一个不断增长的群体,在数量上具有优势。青年是社区变革的关键推动者。年轻人具有影响积极变革的潜力,他们有意义的参与对于改善低收入和中等收入国家的孕产妇健康和福祉非常重要。目的评估社区层面青年主导的干预措施与不干预或其他干预措施相比对改善孕产妇-新生儿健康和福祉的影响。方法我们将进行全面、完整和详尽的文献检索。这将包括MEDLINE、EMBASE和Cochrane图书馆等数据库,以及灰色文献检索。在我们的系统综述中,我们将纳入实验研究,评估与社区层面青年主导的干预措施实施相关或由于实施相关的孕产妇-新生儿健康和福祉。参与者将包括产前、分娩期和产后(产后42天内)的妇女和育龄人员(任何年龄)。我们将审查所有以青年为主导、以社区为基础并以社区成员为目标的产妇-新生儿健康和福祉干预措施。我们的比较国将不进行干预或进行另一种干预。我们的主要结果是产妇死亡和新生儿死亡。我们的审查将只包括在城市或农村地区进行的低收入和中等收入国家的研究。伦理与传播。不需要伦理批准,因为我们将使用公开可用的辅助数据。我们的研究中没有积极的参与者。我们将让母婴健康领域的主要利益攸关方和专家参与传播和知识动员战略。我们的研究结果将作为开放获取出版物传播,公开展示,并作为博士论文的一部分进行辩护。本试验注册号为CRD42021288798。
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Community Level Youth-Led Interventions to Improve Maternal-Neonatal Outcomes in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Protocol for a Systematic Review
Introduction On a global scale, women and childbearing people and neonates continue to die from preventable causes related to pregnancy or childbirth. Sustained and accelerated efforts are critical to improve maternal and neonatal health and well-being. Globally, youth are a growing population and have strength in their numbers. Youth are critical, key drivers of change in their communities. Young people hold the potential to affect positive change, and their meaningful engagement is important to improving maternal health and well-being in low- and middle-income countries. Objectives To assess the effects of community level youth-led interventions for improving maternal-neonatal health and well-being compared with no interventions or another intervention. Methods We will undertake a literature search that is comprehensive, complete, and exhaustive. This will include databases such as MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library, as well as a grey literature search. In our systematic review, we will include experimental studies evaluating maternal-neonatal health and well-being associated with or because of the implementation of community level youth-led interventions. Participants will include women and childbearing people (of any age) during antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum periods (up to 42 days postpartum). We will examine all interventions addressing and targeting maternal-neonatal health and well-being that are youth-led and community-based and aimed at the members of the community. Our comparators will be no intervention or another intervention. Our primary outcomes are maternal deaths and neonatal deaths. Our review will include only studies in low- and middle-income countries conducted in urban or rural areas. Ethics and Dissemination. Ethics approval is not required as we will use secondary data that is publicly available. There are no active participants in our study. We will involve key stakeholders and experts in maternal-neonatal health regarding dissemination and knowledge mobilization strategies. Our findings will be disseminated as an open access publication, be presented publicly, and defended as part of a doctoral thesis. This trial is registered with CRD42021288798.
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