AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research indicates that getting prenatal care is linked to receiving postpartum health care, but how this varies by the source of prenatal care is less understood.
  • The study used data from the U.S. National Survey of Family Growth (2011-2017) to investigate how the source of prenatal care affects the likelihood of not receiving postpartum care.
  • Findings showed that while most women received postpartum care, those who had no prenatal care were significantly more likely to miss postpartum care, highlighting the importance of prenatal care in ensuring follow-up health services.

Article Abstract

Prior work finds that receiving prenatal care is positively associated with receiving postpartum health care. However, less is known about whether postpartum health care receipt varies by the source of prenatal care. This study analyzed data from the 2011-2017 U.S. National Survey of Family Growth to examine associations between the source of prenatal care (private care facility, public/community health facility, other source, or no prenatal care) and nonreceipt of postpartum health care using weighted multivariable logistic regression models. This analysis did not require institutional review board approval. Of the total estimation sample ( = 1,190), 10.8% of respondents reported not receiving postpartum health care. There were no statistically significant differences in nonreceipt of postpartum health care between women who received prenatal care from a public/community health facility or other source and those who attended a private facility. However, women who received no prenatal care had a higher likelihood of not receiving postpartum health care compared with those who attended a private facility (adjusted odds ratio 8.7, 95% confidence interval 4.3-17.5). Receiving prenatal care, regardless of the source, reduced the likelihood of a woman not receiving postpartum health care within a year after delivery. Interventions aimed at women who did not receive any prenatal care may be critical for improving postpartum health care use and subsequently preventing adverse maternal outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jwh.2021.0304DOI Listing

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