| Literature DB >> 34817759 |
Rachel R Hardeman1,2, Saraswathi Vedam3, Jennifer I Almanza4,5, J 'Mag Karbeah2, Katelyn M Tessier1,6, Carrie Neerland1,7, Kathrin Stoll3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: National studies report that birth center care is associated with reduced racial and ethnic disparities and reduced experiences of mistreatment. In the US, there are very few BIPOC-owned birth centers. This study examines the impact of culturally-centered care delivered at Roots, a Black-owned birth center, on the experience of client autonomy and respect.Entities:
Keywords: Autonomy; BIPOC; Birth center; Equity; Respect
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34817759 PMCID: PMC9012707 DOI: 10.1007/s10995-021-03245-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Child Health J ISSN: 1092-7875
Summary of demographics for Roots and GVtM participants (N = 324)
| Variable | Roots participants (N = 80) | GVtM participants (N = 244) |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Number missing | 8 | 18 |
| 18–24 | 8 (11.1%) | 16 (7.1%) |
| 25–29 | 17 (23.6%) | 59 (26.1%) |
| 30–34 | 28 (38.9%) | 97 (42.9%) |
| 35 and older | 19 (26.4%) | 54 (23.9%) |
| Number missing | 4 | 4 |
| Black or African American | 10 (13.2%) | 38 (15.8%) |
| White | 50 (65.8%) | 160 (66.7%) |
| Latina | - | 28 (11.7%) |
| Asian | 4 (5.3%) | 7 (2.9%) |
| Indigenous | - | 6 (2.5%) |
| Other person of color | 1 (1.3%) | 1 (0.4%) |
| More than 1 race | 10 (13.2%) | - |
| African | 1 (1.3%) | - |
| - | ||
| Number missing | 5 | |
| Hispanic or Latina | 6 (8.0%) | |
| Not Hispanic or Latina | 69 (92.0%) | |
| Number missing | 5 | 49 |
| Under $20,000 | - | 12 (6.2%) |
| $20,000-$49,999 | - | 56 (28.7%) |
| $50,000-$99,999 | - | 70 (35.9%) |
| Over $100,000 | - | 57 (29.2%) |
| $15,000 or less | 3 (4.0%) | - |
| $15,001-$37,000 | 16 (21.3%) | - |
| $37,001-$67,600 | 27 (36.0%) | - |
| $67,601-$102,000 | 20 (26.7%) | - |
| Over $102,000 | 9 (12.0%) | - |
| Public | 42 (17.2%) | |
| Private | 131 (53.7%) | |
| Out of pocket | 42 (17.2%) | |
| Other | 29 (11.9%) | |
| - | ||
| Number missing | 8 | |
| Connecticut | 31 (13.1%) | |
| New York | 28 (11.9%) | |
| Texas | 30 (12.7%) | |
| Other | 147 (62.3%) | |
| - | ||
| Nulliparous/primiparous | 114 (46.7%) | |
| Multiparous | 130 (53.3%) | |
Fig. 1Comparison of MADM and MOR scores between Roots and GVtM birth centers (N = 324). Roots sample had 13 participants with missing MOR scores and 8 participants with missing MADM scores, while GVtM sample had 41 participants with missing MOR scores and 22 participants with missing MADM scores
Fig. 2Comparison of MADM and MOR scores between BIPOC and white participants at Roots (N = 76). The Roots BIPOC sample had 4 participants with missing MOR scores and 2 participants with missing MADM scores, while the Roots white sample had 7 participants with missing MOR scores and 4 participants with missing MADM scores
Fig. 3Comparison of MADM and MOR scores between BIPOC participants at Roots and GVtM birth centers (N = 106). The Roots BIPOC sample had 4 participants with missing MOR scores and 2 participants with missing MADM scores, while the GVtM BIPOC sample had 14 participants with missing MOR scores and 3 participants with missing MADM scores.