Kim Jiwon, Heazell Alexander E P, Whittaker Maya, Stacey Tomasina, Watson Kylie
Division of Developmental Biology and Medicine, Maternal and Fetal Health Research Centre, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Saint Mary's Hospital, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
Int J Gynaecol Obstet. 2025 Jan;168(1):69-81. doi: 10.1002/ijgo.15852. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
Health literacy, influenced by sociodemographic characteristics such as ethnicity, economic means and societal factors, affects the ways in which pregnant women maintain their health; this in turn may increase risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes.
To explore what is known about the impact of personal health literacy on prevention of stillbirth and related adverse outcomes in pregnant women of low socioeconomic status or from ethnic minority backgrounds.
MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsychINFO, and CENTRAL were searched as well as reference lists of included studies and gray literature.
Included studies focused on personal health literacy and stillbirth prevention in women from low socioeconomic or ethnic minority backgrounds in the perinatal period.
A meta-summary approach was adopted for qualitative, observational, descriptive, and audit studies. Findings of intervention studies were extracted, and meta-analyses were conducted where possible. The primary outcome was stillbirth; maternal mortality and neonatal mortality were secondary outcomes.
Forty-one studies were included from diverse geographical settings. The meta-summary synthesized five abstracted statements. These recognized lower personal health literacy and greater difficulty interacting with healthcare services in the studied populations, primarily as the result of limited health knowledge, lack of positive perception towards health services, language barriers, illiteracy, and relying on friends or family members for health information. Meta-analysis of intervention studies revealed no association between current interventions that aimed to increase personal health literacy and the risk of stillbirth (relative risk [RR] 1.04, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.96-1.12), neonatal mortality (RR 0.88, 95% CI 0.75-1.03), and maternal mortality (RR 0.87, 95% CI 0.63-1.22).
Various factors suggest lower personal health literacy in women of low socioeconomic status or ethnic minority, which can increase the risk of stillbirth. However, this review identified no significant impact of current health education interventions on the risk of stillbirth, or neonatal or maternal mortality. Although not directly measured, the health education interventions were anticipated to increase personal health literacy. Further research on the topic of this scoping review is warranted, particularly in lower-resource settings and regarding the potential role of e-literacy and organizational health literacy to improve pregnancy outcomes. To address deficits in health literacy, efforts must be made to provide pregnant women with health information in novel, accessible ways.
健康素养受种族、经济状况和社会因素等社会人口学特征影响,会影响孕妇维持自身健康的方式;这反过来可能增加不良妊娠结局的风险。
探讨个人健康素养对社会经济地位低下或少数民族背景孕妇预防死产及相关不良结局的影响。
检索了MEDLINE、CINAHL、PsychINFO和CENTRAL以及纳入研究的参考文献列表和灰色文献。
纳入的研究聚焦围产期社会经济地位低下或少数民族背景女性的个人健康素养与死产预防。
对定性、观察性、描述性和审计研究采用元总结方法。提取干预研究的结果,并在可能的情况下进行荟萃分析。主要结局是死产;孕产妇死亡率和新生儿死亡率是次要结局。
纳入了来自不同地理区域的41项研究。元总结综合了五条摘要陈述。这些陈述认识到在所研究人群中个人健康素养较低,与医疗服务互动存在更大困难,主要原因是健康知识有限、对医疗服务缺乏积极认知、语言障碍、文盲以及依赖朋友或家人获取健康信息。干预研究的荟萃分析显示,目前旨在提高个人健康素养的干预措施与死产风险(相对风险[RR]1.04,95%置信区间[CI]0.96 - 1.12)、新生儿死亡率(RR 0.88,95% CI 0.75 - 1.03)和孕产妇死亡率(RR 0.87,95% CI 0.63 - 1.22)之间无关联。
多种因素表明社会经济地位低下或少数民族女性的个人健康素养较低,这会增加死产风险。然而,本综述发现目前的健康教育干预措施对死产风险、新生儿或孕产妇死亡率无显著影响。尽管未直接测量,但预计健康教育干预措施会提高个人健康素养。有必要对本范围综述的主题进行进一步研究,特别是在资源较少的环境中,以及关于电子素养和组织健康素养对改善妊娠结局的潜在作用。为解决健康素养方面的不足,必须努力以新颖、易获取的方式为孕妇提供健康信息。