Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Prepaid prenatal care bundle delivers quality care to uninsured


 

REPORTING FROM ACOG 2018


Comparing patients receiving care under GHB and Medicaid, Dr. Duncan and her colleagues found that “GHB participants were older, more likely to be Hispanic, and less likely to be black compared to Medicaid recipients (P less than .001 for all,)” they wrote in the poster accompanying the presentation.

Hispanic patients made up 59% of the GHB group, compared with 8% of the Medicaid group, said Dr. Duncan, adding in an interview that over half of Hispanics in the state of Georgia during the study period were undocumented.

Parity was similar between the two groups, as were gestational age at delivery and mode of delivery.

In their analysis, Dr. Duncan and her collaborators looked at both complexity and adequacy of care for the 200 patients studied. They found that there was no significant difference in the number of patients in each care group who remained low risk throughout their pregnancies, transitioned from low risk to high risk, or entered prenatal care with a high risk pregnancy, a circumstance that occurred in about 1 in 10 pregnancies.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Take action to prevent maternal mortality
MDedge ObGyn
Pot peaks in breast milk 1 hour after smoking
MDedge ObGyn
Fetal exposure to depression: How does ‘dose’ figure in?
MDedge ObGyn
Studying the gestational diabetes risk associated with endocrine-disrupting chemicals
MDedge ObGyn
Hints of altered microRNA expression in women exposed to EDCs
MDedge ObGyn
ACOG advises earlier, more comprehensive postpartum care
MDedge ObGyn
Antiretroviral choice for pregnant women with HIV does not appear to impact birth outcomes
MDedge ObGyn
Oncofertility in women: Time for a national solution
MDedge ObGyn
Prolactin, the pituitary, and pregnancy: Where’s the balance?
MDedge ObGyn
Time to scrap LMWH for prevention of placenta-mediated pregnancy complications?
MDedge ObGyn