Abstract
The Prenatal Care and Birth Humanization Program (PHPN) establishes a minimum number of procedures to be provided to all pregnant women during prenatal care. This study aimed to analyze the quality of prenatal care in Sergipe based on the PHPN recommendations. This is a cross-sectional study, with a descriptive and analytic approach, using survey data from the Birth in Sergipe research, conducted from June 2015 to April 2016 with 768 puerperae proportionally distributed among all state maternity hospitals (n = 11). Data were collected from face-to-face interviews and patients' prenatal care cards. The results showed a high coverage of prenatal care (99.3%; n =763), but little more than half of these women started their prenatal care within 16 weeks of gestation (57%; n =435), and 74.7% (n = 570) had six or more visits. We noted that 16.6% (n = 127) of pregnant women were at high risk for complications and almost half continued monitoring prenatal care with professional nurses. Around 61.3% were advised about the maternity care service of reference for delivery, and 29.4% sought more than one health service for childbirth. We concluded that there was a high prenatal care coverage in Sergipe, however, with issues concerning its adaptation to the PHPN.
Highlights
Prenatal care includes a set of measures designed to lead to the delivery of healthy newborns without adverse effects on women’s health, including the psychosocial aspects and educational and preventive activities in this process[1]
The Prenatal Care and Birth Humanization Program (PHPN) establishes a minimum number of procedures to be provided to all pregnant women during prenatal care
This study aimed to analyze the quality of prenatal care in Sergipe based on the PHPN recommendations
Summary
Prenatal care includes a set of measures designed to lead to the delivery of healthy newborns without adverse effects on women’s health, including the psychosocial aspects and educational and preventive activities in this process[1] It includes health promotion and prevention actions, as well as diagnosis and appropriate treatment of eventual issues[2], and is effective in reducing morbimortality related to the pregnancy-puerperal cycle for mothers and their newborns[3]. The Prenatal Care and Birth Humanization Program Monitoring System (SISPRENATAL), a software developed to provide essential information for planning, monitoring and evaluation of actions developed by the PHPN, evidences underreporting issues, with flaws in the recording of minimum procedures recommended by the Program in pregnant women care compared to other sources of information[11]
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