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Research Project
alterado para: “Antenatal care: policy, economy, barriers and facilitators of a midwife-led care model for Portugal” Antenatal Care for Low Risk Women: Is Portugal in the right Track
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Antenatal care policy in high-income countries with a universal health system: A scoping review
Publication . Goncalves, Andreia Soares; Ferreira, Isabel Maria; Pestana-Santos, Márcia; McCourt, Christine; Prata, Ana Paula
The availability, effectiveness, and access to antenatal care are directly linked with good maternal and neonatal
outcomes, making antenatal care an important determinant in health. But to be effective, care must always be
appropriate, not excessive, not insufficient. Perinatal outcomes vary within and between countries, raising
questions about practices, the use of best evidence in clinical decisions and the existence of clear and updated
guidance.
Through a scoping review methodology, this study aimed to map the available antenatal care policies for lowrisk
pregnant women in high-income countries with a universal health system, financed by the government
through tax payments.
Following searches on the main databases and grey literature, the authors identified and analysed ten antenatal
care policies using a previously piloted datachart: Australia, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Italy, Norway,
Portugal, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Some policies were over 10 years old, some recommendations
did not present a rationale or context, others were outdated, or were simply different approaches in the absence
of strong evidence. Whilst some recommendations were ubiquitous, others differed either in the recommendation
provided, the timing, or the frequency. Similarly, we found wide variation in the methods/strategy used to
support the recommendations provided. These results confirm that best evidence is not always assimilated into
policies and clinical guidance. Further research crossing these differences with perinatal outcomes and evaluation
of cost could be valuable to optimise guidance on antenatal care. Similarly, some aspects of care need further
rigorous studies to obtain evidence of higher quality to inform recommendations.
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
Funding Award Number
SFRH/BD/136129/2018