Revista Brasileira de Epidemiologia (Nov 2022)

Primary Health Care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Fortaleza, Brazil: associated factors and pattern of use by mothers and children up to 18 months of age

  • Luciano Lima Correia,
  • Márcia Maria Tavares Machado,
  • David Augusto Batista Sá Araújo,
  • Yuri Valentim Carneiro Gomes,
  • Maria Suelly Nogueira Pinheiro,
  • Hermano Alexandre Lima Rocha,
  • Denise Lima Nogueira,
  • Geziel dos Santos de Sousa,
  • Simone Farias-Antuñez,
  • Márcia Caldas Castro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-549720220036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Objective: To analyze the delay or failure to seek primary health care by the mother-child dyads during the COVID-19 pandemic, a practice that has a high potential to increase maternal and child morbidity and mortality. Methods: Data from three survey rounds of the Iracema-COVID cohort study, collected 6, 12, and 18 months after birth, showed the patterns of postpartum attendance to primary health care consultation of the mother-child dyad. Crude and adjusted multinomial logistic regressions with robust variance were used to assess factors associated with nonattendance. Results: Among the 314 cohort mothers, 25% did not attend any primary health care consultation during the 18-months postpartum, while 30% of the mothers did all three. Regarding the child, 75% had regular primary health care consultations in all three survey rounds, while 4% did not attend any in their first 18 months of life. By the end of the first COVID-19 wave, the proportion of mother and child who attended the consultations had fallen by 23 and 18%, respectively. The main factors associated with nonattendance were mothers aged below 25 years, and mothers with more than one child. Conclusion: An important delay or nonattendance to primary health care consultation by the mother-child dyad was observed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Such practice, with a high potential to increase maternal and child morbidity and mortality, was particularly frequent among younger mothers and those with more than one child.

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