Abstract

It is often suggested that psychological and social support and health education for women at high risk for delivering a low-birth-weight infant can improve the outcomes of pregnancy, but the evidence is inconclusive. We undertook this prospective trial to evaluate a program of home visits designed to provide psychosocial support during pregnancy. At four centers in Latin America, 2235 women at higher-than-average risk for delivering a low-birth-weight infant were recruited before the 20th week of pregnancy. The women were randomly assigned either to an intervention group (n = 1115) that received four to six home visits from a nurse or social worker in addition to routine prenatal care or to a control group (n = 1120) that received only routine prenatal care (with a mean of eight prenatal visits). The principal measures of outcome were low birth weight (< 2500 g), preterm delivery (< 37 weeks of gestation), and specified categories of maternal and neonatal morbidity. The women who received the home visits as well as routine prenatal care had outcomes that differed little from those of the women who received only routine care. The risks of low birth weight (odds ratio for the intervention group as compared with the control group, 0.93; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.68 to 1.28), preterm delivery (odds ratio, 0.88; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.67 to 1.16), and intrauterine growth retardation (odds ratio, 1.08; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.83 to 1.40) were similar in the two groups. There was no evidence that the intervention had any significant effect on the type of delivery, the length of hospital stay, perinatal mortality, or neonatal morbidity in the first 40 days. There was no protective effect of the psychosocial-support program even among the mothers at highest risk. Interventions designed to provide psychosocial support and health education during high-risk pregnancies are unlikely to improve maternal health or to reduce the incidence of low birth weight among infants.

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