| Literature DB >> 33869560 |
Theresa E Gildner1,2, Zaneta M Thayer1,3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted maternity care decisions, including plans to change providers or delivery location due to pandemic-related restrictions and fears. A relatively unexplored question, however, is how the pandemic may shape future maternity care preferences post-pandemic. Here, we use data collected from an online convenience survey of 980 women living in the United States to evaluate how and why the pandemic has affected women's future care preferences. We hypothesize that while the majority of women will express a continued interest in hospital birth and OB/GYN care due to perceived safety of medicalized birth, a subset of women will express a new interest in out-of-hospital or "community" care in future pregnancies. However, factors such as local provider and facility availability, insurance coverage, and out-of-pocket cost could limit access to such future preferred care options. Among our predominately white, educated, and high-income sample, a total of 58 participants (5.9% of the sample) reported a novel preference for community care during future pregnancies. While the pandemic prompted the exploration of non-hospital options, the reasons women preferred community care were mostly consistent with factors described in pre-pandemic studies, (e.g. a preference for a natural birth model and a desire for more person-centered care). However, a relatively high percentage (34.5%) of participants with novel preference for community care indicated that they expected limitations in their ability to access these services. These findings highlight how the pandemic has potentially influenced maternity care preferences, with implications for how providers and policy makers should anticipate and respond to future care needs.Entities:
Keywords: barriers to care; birth center; homebirth; midwife; out of hospital
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869560 PMCID: PMC8022446 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2021.611407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Sociol ISSN: 2297-7775
Codes generated based on common themes identified across participant qualitative descriptions of reasons for care preferences during future pregnancies.
| Code name | Code description |
|---|---|
| Trust | Trust this care type based on previous experience, reputation, and/or level of provider training and expertize |
| Person-centered | Desire for more person-centered care (greater autonomy, provider communication, and more personalized care) |
| Holistic/natural | More holistic/natural care model used (fewer interventions and less medicalized) |
| Safety | Desire to feel safe, comfortable, taken care of, and/or less stressed |
| Pain | Want access to the pain management option(s) available with this type of care |
| Risk | High-risk pregnancy or previous cesarean section so feel must deliver using this option and/or want access to emergency care in case of complications |
| Disease exposure | Feel there is a low risk of disease exposure with this care type |
Descriptive statistics of study sample. Sample means (with standard deviation and range) or frequency (percent) of model variables, for 980 participants.
| Variable | Mean (SD; range) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 31.9 (3.99; 18–47) |
| Frequency (%) | |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| White | 868 (88.6%) |
| Hispanic, Latinx, or Spanish origin | 48 (4.90%) |
| Black or African American | 10 (1.02%) |
| Asian | 28 (2.86%) |
| American Indian or Alaskan native | 6 (0.61%) |
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 3 (0.31%) |
| Other | 17 (1.73%) |
| Location | |
| Metropolitan area, >1,000,000 | 583 (61.8%) |
| Metropolitan area, 250,000–1,000,000 | 209 (22.2%) |
| Metropolitan area, <250,000 | 70 (7.42%) |
| Non-metropolitan area | 81 (8.59%) |
| Household income | |
| < $49,999 | 86 (8.86%) |
| $50,000—$99,999 | 298 (30.7%) |
| $100,000+ | 587 (60.5%) |
| Education level | |
| Less than a bachelor’s degree | 146 (14.9%) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 356 (36.4%) |
| Degree beyond a bachelor’s degree | 477 (48.7%) |
| Insurance coverage | |
| No | 6 (0.61%) |
| Yes | 974 (99.4%) |
| Insurance cover preferred maternity care | |
| No | 48 (4.94%) |
| Yes | 924 (95.1%) |
| Medicaid coverage | |
| No | 908 (93.3%) |
| Yes | 65 (6.68%) |
| Previous birth (before pandemic) | |
| No | 496 (50.7%) |
| Yes | 482 (49.3%) |
| Ever given birth at this location (before pandemic) | |
| Hospital or hospital-based birth center | 464 (96.3%) |
| Home or freestanding birth clinic | 18 (3.73%) |
| Birth location during the COVID-19 pandemic | |
| Hospital or hospital-based birth center | 939 (95.8%) |
| Home or freestanding birth clinic | 39 (3.98%) |
| In a car | 2 (0.20%) |
| Novel future preference for community birth | |
| No | 922 (94.1%) |
| Yes | 58 (5.92%) |
| Anticipate barriers to future care | |
| No | 930 (94.9%) |
| Yes | 50 (5.10%) |