BILLINGS, Hayley and SHEBL, Nada Atef (2021). Factors contributing towards women booking late for antenatal care in the UK. Evidence Based Midwifery, 19 (3), 41-52. [Article]
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ebm-september-2021.pdf - Published Version
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Abstract
Background: In order to improve outcomes for mothers and babies, and to fully
utilise the antenatal screening programmes in the UK, women are advised to access
antenatal care prior to 10 weeks gestation. This study aims to identify reasons as to
why women may book late for antenatal care.
Methods: A structured systematic literature search was undertaken using a PICO
framework to identify research papers that focused upon barriers leading to late
booking for antenatal care in the UK. Inclusion criteria were articles published in
English between January 2001 and October 2020. Electronic databases (PubMed,
CINAHL, Cochrane, NICE, internurse, Google Scholar, Scopus, ScienceDirect and
OpenGrey) were searched using a combination of terms such as ‘antenatal’, ‘late
booking’, ‘barriers’ and ‘UK’. Articles were critically assessed for inclusion and 10%
of these were then independently screened by a second reviewer to ensure validity;
Thematic analysis was then undertaken to identify the most commonly occurring
themes.
Ethical approval: Ethical approval was not required as all literature utilised was
available in the public domain.
Findings: The database search identified 1964 papers published between 2001–
2020. After removing duplicates, 1642 were of potential interest. Following screening
of the title and abstract, 1624 were excluded because of lack of specificity to the
study criteria. The full texts of 18 papers were assessed and a further 6 excluded,
resulting in 12 papers for critical review. From these 12 papers with10 common
themes were identified. These were Social/Lifestyle factors, Ethnicity,
Awareness/acceptance of pregnancy, Unaware of importance/need to book early,
Language barriers and Previous antenatal care experience. Other issues such as
Maternal age, Religious/cultural beliefs, Service provider issues and Multiparity were
also identified.
Discussion and conclusions: Factors leading to late booking were complex, with
many of the themes being intrinsically linked. Difficult social circumstances, lack of
support, judgement by care providers and language barriers were strongly
associated with women not being able to, or not choosing to, access care. Improved
accessibility to services, provision of childcare, the use of interpreters and
community engagement projects are recommended to improve early access to
antenatal care.
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