Neighbourhood socioeconomic position, prenatal care and fulfilment of postpartum permanent contraception: Findings from a multisite cohort study

Kristen A. Berg, Brooke W. Bullington, Douglas D. Gunzler, Emily S. Miller, Margaret Boozer, Tania Serna, Jennifer L. Bailit, Kavita S. Arora
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Abstract

Abstract Introduction Research suggests neighbourhood socioeconomic vulnerability is negatively associated with women's likelihood of receiving adequate prenatal care and achieving desired postpartum permanent contraception. Receiving adequate prenatal care is linked to a greater likelihood of achieving desired permanent contraception, and access to such care may be critical for women with Medicaid insurance given that the federally mandated Medicaid sterilization consent form must be signed at least 30 days before the procedure. We examined whether adequacy of prenatal care mediates the relationship between neighbourhood socioeconomic position and postpartum permanent contraception fulfilment, and examined moderation of relationships by insurance type. Methods This secondary analysis of a retrospective cohort study examined 3012 Medicaid or privately insured individuals whose contraceptive plan at postpartum discharge was permanent contraception. Path analysis estimated relationships between neighbourhood socioeconomic position (economic hardship and inequality, financial strength and educational attainment) and permanent contraception fulfilment by hospital discharge, directly and indirectly through adequacy of prenatal care. Multigroup testing examined moderation by insurance type. Results After adjusting for age, parity, weeks of gestation at delivery, mode of delivery, race, ethnicity, marital status and body mass index, having adequate prenatal care predicted achieving desired sterilization at discharge ( β = 0.065, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.011, 0.117). Living in neighbourhoods with less economic hardship (indirect effect −0.007, 95% CI: −0.015, −0.001), less financial strength (indirect effect −0.016, 95% CI: −0.030, −0.002) and greater educational attainment (indirect effect 0.012, 95% CI: 0.002, 0.023) predicted adequate prenatal care, in turn predicting achievement of permanent contraception by discharge. Insurance status conditioned some of these relationships. Conclusion Contact with the healthcare system via prenatal care may be a mechanism by which neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage affects permanent contraception fulfilment, particularly for patients with Medicaid. To promote reproductive autonomy and healthcare equity, future inquiry and policy might closely examine how neighbourhood social and economic characteristics interact with Medicaid mandates.
社区社会经济地位、产前护理和产后永久避孕的实现:来自一项多地点队列研究的结果
研究表明,社区社会经济脆弱性与妇女接受足够的产前护理和实现所需的产后永久避孕的可能性负相关。接受适当的产前护理与获得永久避孕的可能性更大有关,对于拥有医疗补助保险的妇女来说,获得这种护理可能至关重要,因为联邦政府强制要求的医疗补助绝育同意书必须在手术前至少30天签署。我们考察了产前护理是否充分中介邻里社会经济地位和产后永久避孕的实现之间的关系,并考察了保险类型的调节关系。方法对3012名在产后出院时避孕计划为永久性避孕的医疗补助或私人保险个体进行回顾性队列研究。通径分析估计了社区社会经济地位(经济困难和不平等、经济实力和受教育程度)与通过出院直接或间接通过充足的产前护理实现永久避孕之间的关系。多组检验检验了保险类型的适度性。结果在调整年龄、胎次、分娩周数、分娩方式、种族、民族、婚姻状况和体重指数后,充分的产前护理可以预测出院时是否能实现预期的绝育(β = 0.065, 95%可信区间[CI]: 0.011, 0.117)。生活在经济困难程度较低(间接影响- 0.007,95% CI: - 0.015, - 0.001)、经济实力较弱(间接影响- 0.016,95% CI: - 0.030, - 0.002)和受教育程度较高(间接影响0.012,95% CI: 0.002, 0.023)的社区,预示着充分的产前护理,进而预测出院时永久避孕的实现。保险状况制约了其中一些关系。结论:通过产前护理与卫生保健系统接触可能是社区社会经济劣势影响永久避孕实现的一种机制,特别是对医疗补助患者。为了促进生殖自主和医疗公平,未来的调查和政策可能会密切关注社区社会和经济特征与医疗补助计划的相互作用。
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