Maternal Health Literacy and Infant Health Outcomes Systematic Review
by Zanmei Li·Updated 2mo ago
15.4 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
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Description
A systematic review synthesizing evidence from eight studies across seven countries, involving 13,407 participants. The review, authored by Zanmei Li and published on figshare in April 2026, examines associations between maternal health literacy and child health outcomes from birth to age three. It follows PRISMA guidelines and includes studies from MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science up to March 2025.
Use Cases
Meta-analysis of associations between maternal health literacy and birth weight based on the review's synthesized findings.
Studying behavioral pathways in maternal care, such as symptom recognition and care-seeking, based on the described outcome patterns.
Investigating long-term impacts of health literacy on nutritional deficiencies and developmental delays based on the reported evidence.
Assessing methodological quality and evidence certainty in health literacy research using the referenced JBI and GRADE frameworks.
Strengths
Includes 13,407 participants from eight studies, providing a quantitative basis for synthesis.
Follows PRISMA guidelines and uses JBI and GRADE frameworks for quality and certainty assessment.
Covers studies from seven countries, suggesting a multi-geographic perspective.
Limitations
The dataset is a 15.4 KB DOCX file, indicating a limited scope document rather than a primary data repository.
Row count and column-level documentation are absent; data structure and variables must be inferred from the narrative.
The GRADE framework rated the certainty of evidence as Low to Very Low due to cross-sectional designs and imprecision.
Provenance
Source
figshare
Collection Method
Systematic literature review following PRISMA guidelines, searching MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science.
Time Range
Studies from database inception through March 2025.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-15 05:44:08.
Geography
Studies from seven countries (specific countries not named).
File format is DOCX; data is presented as a review document, not in a structured tabular format.