NAITRE study on the impact of conditional cash transfer on poor pregnancy outcomes in underprivileged women: protocol for a nationwide pragmatic cluster-randomised superiority clinical trial in France.

Fiche publication


Date publication

octobre 2017

Journal

BMJ open

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr BARDOU Marc, Dr FOURNEL Isabelle, Dr MEUNIER-BEILLARD Nicolas


Tous les auteurs :
Bardou M, Crépon B, Bertaux AC, Godard-Marceaux A, Eckman-Lacroix A, Thellier E, Falchier F, Deruelle P, Doret M, Carcopino-Tusoli X, Schmitz T, Barjat T, Morin M, Perrotin F, Hatem G, Deneux-Tharaux C, Fournel I, Laforet L, Meunier-Beillard N, Duflo E, Le Ray I,

Résumé

Prenatal care is recommended during pregnancy to improve neonatal and maternal outcomes. Women of lower socioeconomic status (SES) are less compliant to recommended prenatal care and suffer a higher risk of adverse perinatal outcomes. Several attempts to encourage optimal pregnancy follow-up have shown controversial results, particularly in high-income countries. Few studies have assessed financial incentives to encourage prenatal care, and none reported materno-fetal events as the primary outcome. Our study aims to determine whether financial incentives could improve pregnancy outcomes in women with low SES in a high-income country.

Mots clés

clinical governance, maternal medicine, organisation of health services

Référence

BMJ Open. 2017 Oct 30;7(10):e017321