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Migrant Women's Utilization of Prenatal Care: A Systematic Review
Authors
A Cervantes
A Madan
+59 more
A. Gagnon
AJ Gagnon
AM Vintzileos
AM Vintzileos
B Blondel
B. Blondel
C. Roth
CC Korenbrot
CC Sarnquist
CD Truman
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
D Acevedo-Garcia
D Acevedo-Garcia
D Kessner
D. Kingston
DK Reda El
DP Lindstrom
E Fuentes-Afflick
E Fuentes-Afflick
GK Singh
GR Alexander
GR Alexander
GR Alexander
H Barros
H. Bayrampour
J Fang
J Zeitlin
JB Gould
JC Leslie
JE Potter
M David
M Gissler
M Malin
M. Gissler
M. Heaman
MC Lu
ME Alderliesten
MI Bengiamin
MI Heaman
MI Heaman
MI Heaman
ML Lin
ML Urquia
N Edwards
NC Edwards
P Ny
PT D’Ascoli
R Sarnoff
R Small
R Zambrana
RE Rowe
RJ David
S Bowen
S Petrou
S. Alexander
T Sobotka
United Nations
US Department of Health and Human Services
WF Auslander
Publication date
1 July 2013
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
Our objectives were to determine whether migrant women in Western industrialized countries have higher odds of inadequate prenatal care (PNC) compared to receiving-country women and to summarize factors that are associated with inadequate PNC among migrant women in these countries. We conducted searches of electronic databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsycINFO), reference lists, known experts, and an existing database of the Reproductive Outcomes And Migration international research collaboration for articles published between January, 1995 and April, 2010. Title and abstract review and quality appraisal were conducted independently by 2 reviewers using established criteria, with consensus achieved through discussion. In this systematic review of 29 studies, the majority of studies demonstrated that migrant women were more likely to receive inadequate PNC than receiving-country women, with most reporting moderate to large effect sizes. Rates of inadequate PNC among migrant women varied widely by country of birth. Only three studies explored predictors of inadequate PNC among migrant women. These studies found that inadequate PNC among migrant women was associated with being less than 20 years of age, multiparous, single, having poor or fair language proficiency, education less than 5 years, an unplanned pregnancy, and not having health insurance. We concluded that migrant women as a whole were more likely to have inadequate PNC and the magnitude of this risk differed by country of origin. Few studies addressed predictors of PNC utilization in migrant women and this limits our ability to provide effective PNC in this population. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.SCOPUS: re.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
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