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Positive impact of a long-running urban Aboriginal medical service midwifery program

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Authors

Wong, Raphael
Herceg, Ana
Patterson, Carolyn
Freebairn, Louise
Baker, Ann
Sharp, Peter
Pinnington, Peter
Tongs, Julie

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Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

Background: The Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service Aboriginal Midwifery Access Program (AMAP) was established in 2001 to provide antenatal care, birth support and postnatal care to clients in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT). Aim: To describe the uptake and impact of AMAP services on access to antenatal care, behavioural risk factors and pregnancy outcomes and to compare the characteristics of AMAP clients with other women giving birth in the ACT. Methods: A descriptive study of medical records for AMAP clients who gave birth in 2004-2008. Outcome measures: maternal and baby characteristics, antenatal visits, behavioural risk factors and complications. Characteristics of AMAP clients were compared with the ACT Maternal and Perinatal Collection. Results: Of 187 women, 11.2% were aged <20 years, 50.3% presented in the first trimester and 94.7% attended five or more antenatal visits. Of 193 babies, 17.1% were born preterm and 18.1% had low birthweight. Compared with the ACT Maternal and Perinatal Collection, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander AMAP clients had a higher smoking rate (63.8 vs 49.0%), a lower caesarean delivery rate (20.0 vs 27.6%), a slightly lower proportion of preterm babies (18.8 vs 21.6%) and a slightly lower proportion of low-birthweight babies (18.8 vs 21.0%). Conclusions: Aboriginal Midwifery Access Program provides high-quality antenatal care in a trusted environment. The high rate of smoking in pregnancy needs to be addressed.

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Citation

Source

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology

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Restricted until

2037-12-31