Écrit par WHO			
				
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				09 Novembre 2016			
			
				
		
				
				
		
7 NOVEMBER 2016 | GENEVA – The World Health Organization (WHO) has  issued a new series of recommendations to improve quality of antenatal  care in order to reduce the risk of stillbirths and pregnancy  complications and give women a positive pregnancy experience.
 Last year, an estimated 303 000 women died from pregnancy-related  causes, 2.7 million babies died during the first 28 days of life and 2.6  million babies were stillborn. Quality health care during pregnancy and  childbirth can prevent many of these deaths, yet  globally only 64% of  women receive antenatal (prenatal) care four or more times throughout  their pregnancy.
 
 Antenatal care is a critical opportunity for health providers to  deliver care, support and information to pregnant women. This includes  promoting a healthy lifestyle, including good nutrition; detecting and  preventing diseases; providing family planning counselling and  supporting women who may be experiencing intimate partner violence.
 
 “If women are to use antenatal care services and come back when it is  time to have their baby, they must receive good quality care throughout  their pregnancy.” says Dr Ian Askew, Director of Reproductive Health  and Research, WHO. “Pregnancy should be a positive experience for all  women and they  should receive care that respects their dignity.”
 
 WHO recommendations on antenatal care
 
 WHO’s new antenatal care model increases the number of contacts a  pregnant woman has with health providers throughout her pregnancy from  four to eight. Recent evidence indicates that a higher frequency of  antenatal contacts by women and adolescent girls with the health system  is associated with a reduced likelihood of stillbirths. This is because  of the increased opportunities to detect and manage potential problems. A  minimum of eight contacts for antenatal care can reduce perinatal  deaths by up to 8 per 1000 births when compared to a minimum of four  visits.
 
 The new model increases maternal and fetal assessments to detect  problems, improves communication between health providers and pregnant  women, and increases the likelihood of positive pregnancy outcomes. It  recommends pregnant women to have their first contact in the first 12  weeks’ gestation, with subsequent contacts taking place at 20, 26, 30,  34, 36, 38 and 40 weeks’ gestation.
 
 “More and better quality contacts between all women and their health  providers throughout pregnancy will facilitate the uptake of preventive  measures, timely detection of risks, reduces complications and addresses  health inequalities,” says Dr Anthony Costello, Director of Maternal,  Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health, WHO. “Antenatal care for first  time mothers is key. This will determine how they use antenatal care in  future pregnancies.”
 
 The new guidelines contain 49 recommendations that outline what care  pregnant women should receive at each of the contacts with the health  system, including counselling on healthy diet and optimal nutrition,  physical activity, tobacco and substance use; malaria and HIV  prevention; blood tests and tetanus vaccination; fetal measurements  including use of ultrasound; and advice for dealing with common  physiological symptoms such as nausea, back pain and constipation. 
 
 “Counselling about healthy eating, optimal nutrition and what vitamins  or minerals women should take during pregnancy can go a long way in  helping them and their developing babies stay healthy throughout  pregnancy and beyond,” says Dr Francesco Branca, Director Department on  Nutrition for Health and Development, WHO.
 
 By recommending an increase in the amount of contact a pregnant woman  has with her health provider, WHO is seeking to improve the quality of  antenatal care and reduce maternal and perinatal mortality among all  populations, including adolescent girls and those in hard-to-reach areas  or conflict settings.
 
 WHO recommendations allow flexibility for countries to employ different  options for the delivery of antenatal care based on their specific  needs. This means, for example, care can be provided through midwives  or other trained health personnel, delivered at health facilities or  through community outreach services. A woman’s ‘contact’ with her  antenatal care provider should be more than a simple ‘visit’ but rather  the provision of care and support throughout pregnancy.
 
 Sample recommendations include:
-  Antenatal care model with a minimum of eight contacts recommended to  reduce perinatal mortality and improve women’s experience of care.
-  Counselling about healthy eating and keeping physically active during pregnancy.
-  Daily oral iron and folic acid supplementation with 30 mg to 60 mg of  elemental iron and 400 µg (0.4 mg) folic acid for pregnant women to  prevent maternal anaemia, puerperal sepsis, low birth weight, and  preterm birth.
-  Tetanus toxoid vaccination is recommended for all pregnant women,  depending on previous tetanus vaccination exposure, to prevent neonatal  mortality from tetanus.
-  One ultrasound scan before 24 weeks’ gestation (early ultrasound) is  recommended for pregnant women to estimate gestational age, improve  detection of fetal anomalies and multiple pregnancies, reduce induction  of labour for post-term pregnancy, and improve a woman’s pregnancy  experience.
-  Health-care providers should ask all pregnant women about their use of  alcohol and other substances (past and present) as early as possible in  the pregnancy and at every antenatal visit.