1999
DOI: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.1999.00133.x
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Integrated Maternal and Infant Health Care in the Postpartum Period in a Poor Neighborhood in Santiago, Chile

Abstract: An integrated postpartum health-care program was established by the Consultorio San Luis de Huechuraba (CSLH), a nongovernmental organization in a neighborhood of extreme poverty in Santiago, Chile. The main components were education, maternal and infant health care, support for the mothers, and active participation of women from the community served. The program was evaluated through indicators of contraceptive use, breastfeeding performance, infant growth and health, and a qualitative assessment of women's s… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…Their lack of understanding appeared to be unrelated to subsequent pregnancies, however (Kennedy et al 1998). Similar mixed results have been obtained regarding the role of LAM as a gateway to the use of modern methods; some studies find no greater use of contraceptives at 6 or at 12 months among some previous users of LAM than among those who did not use LAM or those who have used other methods (Hardy et al 1998;Alvarado et al 1999;Tazhibayev et al 2004;Bongiovanni et al 2005). In summary, although LAM is an effective clinical method, programs must find more efficacious strategies for training providers and counseling clients regarding the three conditions required to use it appropriately and effectively, and how to use LAM as a bridge to the adoption of modern methods.…”
Section: The Lactational Amenorrhea Methodsmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Their lack of understanding appeared to be unrelated to subsequent pregnancies, however (Kennedy et al 1998). Similar mixed results have been obtained regarding the role of LAM as a gateway to the use of modern methods; some studies find no greater use of contraceptives at 6 or at 12 months among some previous users of LAM than among those who did not use LAM or those who have used other methods (Hardy et al 1998;Alvarado et al 1999;Tazhibayev et al 2004;Bongiovanni et al 2005). In summary, although LAM is an effective clinical method, programs must find more efficacious strategies for training providers and counseling clients regarding the three conditions required to use it appropriately and effectively, and how to use LAM as a bridge to the adoption of modern methods.…”
Section: The Lactational Amenorrhea Methodsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Moreover, although half the women in intervention hospitals said that they planned to use LAM, significantly fewer knew the three essential elements of the method (Tazhibayev et al 2004). Similarly, in a study in Chile in which exclusive breastfeeding was promoted and LAM was systematically explained to all clients at one clinic but not to those of another, only 2.5 percent of women in the intervention clinic (and no women in the control clinic) used LAM in the postpartum period, whereas 74 percent and 10 percent, respectively, fully breastfed their children at six months (Alvarado et al 1999).…”
Section: The Lactational Amenorrhea Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The limitations of the identified studies on mother–infant integration programs included unclear time and method of outcome measurement [24,25] and significant loss to follow-up limiting the ability to measure outcomes [21,22]. In addition, the study by Huntington et al [23] was a combination of a time series survey and a retrospective review of service statistics, both of which have a high susceptibility to confounding and bias.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such research could be seen as integral to trial site development and as a component of preparatory social science and behavioural studies that precede vaccine trials. Ideally, such steps might initiate further social emancipations (Alvarado et al 1999) to supplement, in small local ways, the global development agenda (Labonte et al 2005) and offset the pernicious links between gender, low social class and infectious disease mortality. This process would ensure that HIV vaccine trials can be conducted ethically, and ultimately would bring increasing health and social benefits to this disproportionately affected population.…”
Section: Women and Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%