| Literature DB >> 34318295 |
Rachel S Ruderman1, Emma C Dahl1, Brittney R Williams1, Ka'Derricka Davis1, Joe M Feinglass2, William A Grobman1, Michelle A Kominiarek1, Lynn M Yee1.
Abstract
Background: Recent paradigm shifts in postpartum care have conceptualized the "fourth trimester" as a critical transitional period requiring tailored, ongoing health care. However, this concept presents challenges for providers, especially in low-resource settings. Our objective was to understand providers' perspectives on challenges in postpartum care to highlight strategies for optimizing care.Entities:
Keywords: health care provider; health disparities; postpartum; postpartum care; provider perspective
Year: 2021 PMID: 34318295 PMCID: PMC8310741 DOI: 10.1089/whr.2021.0009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Womens Health Rep (New Rochelle) ISSN: 2688-4844
Semistructured Interview Content
| Content categories | Example topics |
|---|---|
| Challenges to postpartum care | Greatest challenges to low-income pregnant and postpartum women |
| Difficulties for providers, including nonclinical task burden | |
| Resources lacking in the provision of postpartum care | |
| Retention in postpartum care | Indicators and motivators for follow-up postpartum |
| Most effective methods to engage patients outside of the clinical setting | |
| Impact of social media and community groups | |
| Current effective practices | Qualities of productive community or virtual groups |
| Areas of clinical practice that currently run smoothly | |
| Resources currently utilized in the clinic |
Provider Participants (N = 26)
| Job category | Participant subtype | |
|---|---|---|
| Physicians | Obstetrics–gynecology residents | 15 |
| Maternal–fetal medicine fellows | 3 | |
| Obstetrics–gynecology specialist faculty | 1 | |
| Maternal–fetal medicine subspecialist faculty | 1 | |
| Nurses | Registered nurses | 4 |
| Social workers | Obstetric licensed clinical social workers | 2 |
Provider-Perceived Barriers for Patients and Providers in the Postpartum Period
| Theme | Subtheme | Exemplary quotation |
|---|---|---|
| Environment | Housing instability | “A lot of our patients are housing unstable and so all the support and money when you're pregnant but postpartum is really challenging.” |
| Limited childcare | “So oftentimes when I have patients who don't show, when I call to see hey, are you still coming,…the most common reasons that I hear are I didn't have a way to get to the clinic or I don't have anyone to watch my kids.” | |
| Transportation challenges | “Being able to get downtown by car, by bus, is the weather prohibiting being able to get here by bus, is parking too costly and like prohibitive to come to a visit.” | |
| Societal | Insurance limitations | “Patients navigating their insurance for the first time whether they are uninsured and now because of the pregnancy have become eligible to receive Medicaid and navigating that whole process can be very challenging for patients.” |
| Lack of access to primary care provider | “A lot of people don't have primary care doctors. So after their one visit with us, if they still have issues, a lot of them haven't been hooked up to other types of care yet.” | |
| Institutional | Appointment scheduling difficulties | “I'll notice that sometimes patient you know have a hard time knowing what number to call, how to make those appointments and sort of yeah, how to do those follow up things.” |
| Short appointment length | “I just don't think in 15 minutes we can see an OB patient, counsel them, like take care of what they medically need and counsel them on whatever stage of pregnancy they're in, I just find it really difficult.” | |
| Inability to place referrals in the system | “A lot of it is sort of the responsibility is on the patient. Like we can't really get them in to see primary care at [institution]. It's really challenging.” | |
| Lack of continuity | “I don't have a provider that I identify as my provider, and so I don't have that like sense of trust and that willingness to engage because I'm not like, hey Doctor Smith, I saw you 12 times during my pregnancy…” | |
| Nonclinical task burden | “The paperwork that needs to be filled out, like FMLA paperwork and there are a lot of those kinds of tasks and trying to get like breast pumps and like all of those kind of things that I think end up being burdensome and obviously are high priority for patients.” | |
| Training gaps | “Even though they do teaching with us about breastfeeding and troubleshooting, I … don't have like the expertise or the experience to troubleshoot with patients.” | |
| Interpersonal | Lack of trust with providers | “I think mistrust can play a major role and when patients don't feel that they have like a trust in their provider that we're not going to be able to provide the best care, it kinda goes both ways.” |
| Language barrier | “I also think sometimes it's a language barrier. Like they pretend to know what, they pretend and they agree they do know what they're being told. But then if it's Spanish I could speak to them and then they're like, no I did not understand that.” | |
| Concern for patient autonomy | “We all kind of struggle with this question…is how much do you do for our patients in terms of like trying to help them and coordinate their care but also like wanting to like empower them to also…have some agency over their own healthcare.” | |
| Limited family support | “I think you know like the complete overwhelmed feeling that they might have after delivering and trying to manage all of that, so I think you know support from family… actually having someone there that is almost as engaged in their care as they are, I think that's a huge challenge.” | |
| Focusing on the pregnancy, not the patient | “I think we systemically tell women they are valued because they're pregnant and not valued because they are postpartum and the way that they are able to access care because they're able to you know get insurance and then the frequency with which we see them…” | |
| Individual | Asymptomatic disease processes | “The fact that the acute health problem has passed and most women in the postpartum period are fine or feel fine.” |
| Low health literacy | “I think one of the challenges is health literacy. They don't understand the importance of certain points in prenatal care and or postpartum, simply because they don't understand a bigger broader picture of it.” | |
| Postpartum mental health issues | “I think like there's some level of mood changes in every postpartum woman that is difficult to navigate.” |
FMLA, Family and Medical Leave Act; OB, obstetrics.
Provider-Perceived Facilitators for Improved Postpartum Care
| Theme | Subtheme | Exemplary quotation |
|---|---|---|
| Environment | Coordinating postpartum and newborn care | “I think that would actually be pretty fantastic if that was something that we could offer our patients, is like you get baby checked, you get checked.” |
| Societal | Community groups | “I know there's some really good data on group prenatal classes in the community…I think that would be really helpful and increase the engagement.” |
| Peer-to-peer education and support | “Just colloquially patients mentioned talking with their friends, their classmates, their family members about certain aspects of prenatal care and a lot of those conversations make a much bigger impact on their decisions to do or not do certain things than our discussions with them.” | |
| Social media groups | “ACOG has an Instagram page, and I know at one point they were talking about maternal morbidity and mortality… the amount of like conversations that it started, I think were very helpful and I think that they were bringing awareness about things to patients they otherwise didn't realize..” | |
| Institutional | Access to social worker | “I think our access for a social worker is really great and she is very very on top of it about being in communication.” |
| Complex antenatal courses leading to improved postpartum follow-up | “I think people engage when they have an issue but other than that they certainly are less likely to come to their postpartum visit.” | |
| Interpersonal | Counseled on importance of follow-up | “The more we mention and communicate those things I think the more likely patients are to internalize it and then follow up postpartum or like prioritize their health postpartum as well.” |
| Continuity with providers | “Patients who have been [seen] by the same provider and they've been lucky enough to get that continuity and they know that they're going to go back and see that same provider again in the future, that's an increased likelihood that they're going to return.” | |
| Clearer guidelines of when patients should return | “We now have specific parameters for a variety of different hypertensive situations and like exactly how long they need to follow up..” | |
| Telemedicine to facilitate more frequent follow-up | “I think it's something that has been really nice about this period of time is like actually being able to call a patient and feeling empowered to do that.” | |
| Individual | Increased educational resources | “Do a standardized like discharge instruction text … that varies slightly by medical problem, so there's one for like healthy patients, there's one in Spanish, there's one for hypertensive patients and diabetic patients, like what if we just threw a resources section on the bottom of that discharge instructions template that went to every patient.” |
| Tangible gains from attending appointments | “Postpartum contraception can be a big motivating factor for people to engage with their postpartum visit.” |
ACOG, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
FIG. 1.Continuum of challenges for patients and providers in the Social Ecological Model.