Study protocol: a mixed-methods study of the implementation of doula care to address racial health equity in six state Medicaid programs.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Marian Jarlenski, Susan Kennedy, Annaliese Johnson, Caroline Hale, Zoe D'Angelo, Aza Nedhari, Gerria Coffee, Molly Chappell-McPhail, Kiddada Green, Dara D Méndez, Leigh G Goetschius, Sarah Gareau, Kristin Ashford, Andrew J Barnes, Katherine A Ahrens, Kara Zivin, Elizabeth Mosley, Lu Tang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Racial inequities in severe maternal morbidity (SMM) and mortality constitute a public health crisis in the United States. Doula care, defined as care from birth workers who provide culturally appropriate, non-clinical support during pregnancy and postpartum, has been proposed as an intervention to help disrupt obstetric racism as a driver of adverse pregnancy outcomes in Black and other birthing persons of colour. Many state Medicaid programs are implementing doula programs to address the continued increase in SMM and mortality. Medicaid programs are poised to play a major role in addressing the needs of these populations with the goal of closing the racial gaps in SMM and mortality. This study will investigate the most effective ways that Medicaid programs can implement doula care to improve racial health equity.

Methods: We describe the protocol for a mixed-methods study to understand how variation in implementation of doula programs in Medicaid may affect racial equity in pregnancy and postpartum health. Primary study outcomes include SMM, person-reported measures of respectful obstetric care, and receipt of evidence-based care for chronic conditions that are the primary causes of postpartum mortality (cardiovascular, mental health, and substance use conditions). Our research team includes doulas, university-based investigators, and Medicaid participants from six sites (Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Virginia) in the Medicaid Outcomes Distributed Research Network (MODRN). Study data will include policy analysis of doula program implementation, longitudinal data from a cohort of doulas, cross-sectional data from Medicaid beneficiaries, and Medicaid healthcare administrative data. Qualitative analysis will examine doula and beneficiary experiences with healthcare systems and Medicaid policies. Quantitative analyses (stratified by race groups) will use matching techniques to estimate the impact of using doula care on postpartum health outcomes, and will use time-series analyses to estimate the average treatment effect of doula programs on population postpartum health outcomes.

Discussion: Findings will facilitate learning opportunities among Medicaid programs, doulas and Medicaid beneficiaries. Ultimately, we seek to understand the implementation and integration of doula care programs into Medicaid and how these processes may affect racial health equity. Study registration The study is registered with the Open Science Foundation ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/NXZUF ).

研究协议:在六个州医疗补助项目中实施朵拉护理以解决种族健康平等问题的混合方法研究。
背景:在美国,严重孕产妇发病率(SMM)和死亡率中的种族不平等构成了公共卫生危机。朵拉护理被定义为在孕期和产后提供文化上适当的、非临床支持的分娩工作者提供的护理,已被提议作为一种干预措施,以帮助瓦解作为黑人和其他有色人种不良妊娠结局驱动因素的产科种族主义。许多州的医疗补助(Medicaid)项目正在实施朵拉项目,以应对SMM和死亡率的持续增长。医疗补助计划将在满足这些人群的需求方面发挥重要作用,其目标是缩小 SMM 和死亡率方面的种族差距。本研究将调查医疗补助项目实施朵拉护理以改善种族健康平等的最有效方法:我们描述了一项混合方法研究的方案,以了解医疗补助计划中朵拉(doula)项目的实施差异如何影响怀孕和产后健康中的种族平等。主要研究结果包括SMM、个人报告的尊重产科护理措施,以及接受基于证据的慢性病护理,这些慢性病是产后死亡的主要原因(心血管、精神健康和药物使用状况)。我们的研究团队包括来自医疗补助结果分布式研究网络(MODRN)六个站点(肯塔基州、马里兰州、密歇根州、宾夕法尼亚州、南卡罗来纳州和弗吉尼亚州)的助产士、大学调查人员和医疗补助参与者。研究数据将包括朵拉项目实施的政策分析、朵拉队列的纵向数据、医疗补助受益人的横截面数据以及医疗补助医疗管理数据。定性分析将研究朵拉和受益人在医疗保健系统和医疗补助政策方面的经验。定量分析(按种族群体分层)将使用匹配技术来估计使用朵拉护理对产后健康结果的影响,并将使用时间序列分析来估计朵拉项目对人群产后健康结果的平均治疗效果:研究结果将促进医疗补助项目、朵拉和医疗补助受益人之间的学习机会。最终,我们希望了解朵拉护理项目在医疗补助计划中的实施和整合情况,以及这些过程如何影响种族健康公平。研究注册 该研究已在开放科学基金会 ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/NXZUF ) 注册。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Research Policy and Systems
Health Research Policy and Systems HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
7.50%
发文量
124
审稿时长
27 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Research Policy and Systems is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal that aims to provide a platform for the global research community to share their views, findings, insights and successes. Health Research Policy and Systems considers manuscripts that investigate the role of evidence-based health policy and health research systems in ensuring the efficient utilization and application of knowledge to improve health and health equity, especially in developing countries. Research is the foundation for improvements in public health. The problem is that people involved in different areas of research, together with managers and administrators in charge of research entities, do not communicate sufficiently with each other.
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