Abstract

BackgroundThe 2016 World Health Organization Antenatal Guidelines and the 2015 South African Maternal and Child Health Guidelines recommend one early antenatal ultrasound scan to establish gestational age and to detect multiple pregnancies and fetal abnormalities. Prior research indicates that ultrasound scan can also increase parental–fetal attachment. We aim to establish whether, compared to routine care, messages to promote parental attachment and healthy child development, conducted during one or two pregnancy ultrasound scans, improve early child development and growth, exclusive breastfeeding, parental–child interactions and prenatal and postnatal clinic attendance.MethodsThe effect of messages to sensitise mothers and fathers to fetal development will be tested in a three-armed randomised trial with 100 mothers and their partners from Soweto, Johannesburg in each arm. The primary outcome is child development at 6 months postnatally. Secondary outcomes include infant feeding, parental attachment and interaction, parental mental health and infant growth, assessed at 6 weeks and 6 months. Parents in Arm 1 receive a fetal ultrasound scan < 25 weeks during routine antenatal care at tertiary hospitals, and a second standard ultrasound scan at the research site within 2 weeks. Arm 2 participants receive the routine antenatal ultrasound scan and an additional ultrasound scan < 25 weeks at the research site, together with messages to promote parental attachment and healthy child development. Arm 3 participants receive the routine ultrasound scan and two additional ultrasound scans at the research site, < 25 weeks and < 36 weeks, together with messages to promote parental attachment and healthy child development.DiscussionEvidence from high-income countries suggests that first-time prospective mothers and fathers enjoy seeing their fetus during ultrasound scan and that it is an emotional experience. A number of studies have found that ultrasound scan increases maternal attachment during pregnancy, a predictor of positive parent–infant interactions which, in turn, promotes healthy infant development. It is generally agreed that studies are needed which follow up parental–child behaviour and healthy child development postnatally, include fathers and examine the construct in a wider diversity of settings, especially in low and middle-income countries. Testing the added benefits of pregnancy ultrasound scan for child development is a gap that the proposed trial in South Africa seeks to address.Trial registrationPan African Clinical Trials Registry, PACTR201808107241133. Registered on 15 August 2018.

Highlights

  • The 2016 World Health Organization Antenatal Guidelines and the 2015 South African Maternal and Child Health Guidelines recommend one early antenatal ultrasound scan to establish gestational age and to detect multiple pregnancies and fetal abnormalities

  • The 2017 Lancet Series Advancing Early Childhood Development: From Science to Scale recommended that the contacts which the Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH) services have with pregnant women, parents and families are important entry points to promote early childhood development (ECD) [5]

  • This study examines Ultrasound scan (US) augmented with messages about fetal and infant development and the importance of parent well-being and infant care on postnatal care and early childhood development

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Summary

Introduction

The 2016 World Health Organization Antenatal Guidelines and the 2015 South African Maternal and Child Health Guidelines recommend one early antenatal ultrasound scan to establish gestational age and to detect multiple pregnancies and fetal abnormalities. More than 250 million children younger than 5 years of age in low and middle-income countries (43% of the total globally) are at risk of not reaching their developmental potential because they are stunted or live in extreme poverty. This rises to 70% of young children in sub-Saharan Africa, which has the highest risk burden in the world [1]. The 2017 Lancet Series Advancing Early Childhood Development: From Science to Scale recommended that the contacts which the Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH) services have with pregnant women, parents and families are important entry points to promote ECD [5]. The series noted that many effective programmes for ECD are currently built on health services, demonstrating the feasibility of this approach for taking interventions to promote ECD to scale [2, 6]

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