Therefore, pregnant women without any serious issues should use online antenatal care programs as an alternative to routine antenatal care in a hospital at least to some extent. Therefore, it is important to establish close collaboration between hospitals and professional institutes to improve the quality of online programs, ensuring the reliability of their information. Adelekan B, Goldson E, Abubakar Z, Mueller U, Alayande A, Ojogun T, Ntoimo L, Williams B, Muhammed I, Okonofua F. Reprod Health. Effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on antenatal care utilisation in Kenya: a cross-sectional study. Davis D, Sheehy A, Nightingale H, de Vitry-Smith S, Taylor J, Cummins A. Midwifery. People across the world have been greatly affected by the ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. WebThe World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a strong recommendation supporting womens right to have a chosen companion during labor and delivery, even during the Further research includes pilot studies to explore the acceptability of the model and recommendation implementation in practice. The study aimed to determine the utilization of antenatal care services of Filipino women during the COVID-19 pandemic. Alternative versus standard packages of antenatal care for lowrisk pregnancy. Women Birth 2013 Mar;26(1):e5-e8 [, Ho PL, Tang XP, Seto WH. /MediaBox [0 0 612 792] Negative predictors were employment (OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.22-0.63) and medical examination prior to pregnancy (OR 0.36, 95% CI 0.23-0.58). Efforts and expectations of pregnant women against the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic: a phenomenological study. The impact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on maternity care in Europe. The details of the antenatal care (ANC) models are shown in Table 1 (3,7,9). The evidence indicates that if women do not attend antenatal services then they are at risk of maternal death, stillbirth and other adverse perinatal outcomes (3,4). ,b"yH`J! 2021-14 (November 23, 2021) Very few SREs were reported by ambulatory surgical centers in calendar year 2021 and the number of SREs associated with surgical or invasive procedures was slightly diminished overall as compared to pre-pandemic levels. Edited by G Eysenbach, G Fagherazzi; submitted 10.05.20; peer-reviewed by D Groselj, A Al-Hasan; comments to author 22.06.20; revised version received 02.07.20; accepted 13.07.20; published 22.07.20.