Smith Holly Christina, Saxena Sonia, Petersen Irene
Department of Primary Care and Population Health, University College London, London, UK
School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2020 Nov 23;10(11):e036835. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-036835.
To describe women's uptake of postnatal checks and primary care consultations in the year following childbirth.
Observational cohort study using electronic health records.
UK primary care.
Women aged 16-49 years who had given birth to a single live infant recorded in The Health Improvement Network (THIN) primary care database in 2006-2016.
Postnatal checks and direct consultations in the year following childbirth.
We examined 1 427 710 consultations in 309 573 women who gave birth to 241 662 children in 2006-2016. Of these women, 78.7% (243 516) had a consultation at the time of the postnatal check, but only 56.2% (174 061) had a structured postnatal check documented. Teenage women (aged 16-19 years) were 12% less likely to have a postnatal check compared with those aged 30-35 years (incidence rate ratio (IRR) 0.88, 95% CI 0.85 to 0.91) and those living in the most deprived versus least deprived areas were 10% less likely (IRR 0.90, 95% CI 0.88 to 0.92). Women consulted on average 4.8 times per woman per year and 293 049 women (94.7%) had at least one direct consultation in the year after childbirth. Consultation rates were higher for those with a caesarean delivery (7.7 per woman per year, 95% CI 7.7 to 7.8). Consultation rates peaked during weeks 5-10 following birth (11.8 consultations/100 women) coinciding with the postnatal check.
Two in 10 women did not have a consultation at the time of the postnatal check and four in 10 women have no record of receiving a structured postnatal check within the first 10 weeks after giving birth. Teenagers and those from the most deprived areas are among the least likely to have a check. We estimate up to 350 400 women per year in the UK may be missing these opportunities for timely health promotion and to have important health needs identified following childbirth.
描述产后一年内女性进行产后检查及初级保健咨询的情况。
使用电子健康记录的观察性队列研究。
英国初级保健机构。
2006 - 2016年在健康改善网络(THIN)初级保健数据库中记录的生育了单胎活婴的16 - 49岁女性。
产后一年内的产后检查及直接咨询。
我们检查了2006 - 2016年生育241662名儿童的309573名女性的1427710次咨询。在这些女性中,78.7%(243516名)在产后检查时进行了咨询,但只有56.2%(174061名)有结构化产后检查的记录。与30 - 35岁的女性相比,青少年女性(16 - 19岁)进行产后检查的可能性低12%(发病率比(IRR)0.88,95%置信区间0.85至0.91),生活在最贫困地区与最不贫困地区的女性相比,可能性低10%(IRR 0.90,95%置信区间0.88至0.92)。每位女性每年平均咨询4.8次,293049名女性(94.7%)在产后一年内至少进行了一次直接咨询。剖宫产女性的咨询率更高(每位女性每年7.7次,95%置信区间7.7至7.8)。咨询率在出生后第5 - 10周达到峰值(11.8次咨询/100名女性),与产后检查时间一致。
十分之二的女性在产后检查时未进行咨询,十分之四的女性在分娩后前10周内没有接受结构化产后检查的记录。青少年和来自最贫困地区的女性是最不可能进行检查的人群。我们估计英国每年多达350400名女性可能错过这些及时促进健康以及识别产后重要健康需求的机会。