Facilitators and barriers to implementation of immediate postpartum long-acting reversible contraception programs within Pennsylvania hospitals 7 years after Pennsylvania Medicaid reimbursement
Grace Ferguson , Emma G. Guare , Candace Bordner , Cynthia H. Chuang , Sarah Horvath
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
This study aimed to evaluate facilitators and barriers to implementation of immediate postpartum long-acting reversible contraception (IPLARC) within Pennsylvania (PA) hospitals 7 years after PA Medicaid adopted coverage of IPLARC outside the pregnancy care bundled payment, with particular attention to rural, small, or nonacademic hospitals.
Study Design
We conducted 10 qualitative interviews representing 10 unique hospitals from an opt-in subset of participants in our quantitative survey of clinician leaders at PA Labor and Delivery units. Transcripts were analyzed using grounded theory methodology. We coded and analyzed transcripts using MAXQDA software.
Results
Several themes emerged from the data, three of which are novel. First, that passage of Medicaid reimbursement was necessary but not sufficient for widespread implementation of IPLARC. We also found that hospital mergers and consolidations facilitated the capacity of smaller hospitals to implement and sustain IPLARC and that the Pennsylvania Perinatal Quality Collaborative was a utilized resource.
Conclusion
Medicaid coverage of IPLARC is a necessary facilitator but not sufficient for all hospitals to implement this service. Smaller, nonurban hospitals may benefit more from network-level support and state Perinatal Quality Collaboratives than their larger, academic urban hospital counterparts.
Implications
Medicaid coverage of IPLARC was a necessary facilitator but not sufficient for all PA hospitals to implement this care. Internal support from larger hospital systems via buyouts/mergers and external support programs (state Perinatal Quality Collaboratives) may play a larger role in implementation at smaller, rural, or nonacademic hospitals.
期刊介绍:
Contraception has an open access mirror journal Contraception: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review.
The journal Contraception wishes to advance reproductive health through the rapid publication of the best and most interesting new scholarship regarding contraception and related fields such as abortion. The journal welcomes manuscripts from investigators working in the laboratory, clinical and social sciences, as well as public health and health professions education.