| Literature DB >> 35486400 |
Maria I Rodriguez1,2, Ann Martinez Acevedo2, Jonas J Swartz3, Aaron B Caughey1, Amy Valent1, K John McConnell2.
Abstract
Importance: Access to necessary prenatal care is not guaranteed through Medicaid for some people with low income based on their immigration status. Although states have the option to extend emergency Medicaid coverage for prenatal care, many states have not expanded coverage. Objective: To evaluate whether the receipt of prenatal care services through the extension of emergency Medicaid coverage is associated with an increase in antidiabetic medication use among Latina patients with gestational diabetes. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study used linked Medicaid claims and birth certificate data on live births to 4869 Latina patients from October 1, 2010, to December 31, 2019, with a difference-in-differences design to compare the rollout of prenatal care and services in Oregon in 2013 with a comparison state, South Carolina, that did not cover prenatal or postpartum care. Exposure: Medicaid coverage of prenatal care. Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome was the receipt of antidiabetic agents. Secondary outcomes included hypertensive disorders, cesarean delivery, postpartum contraception, and a newborn morbidity composite outcome (large size for gestational age, neonatal intensive care unit admission, and preterm birth).Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35486400 PMCID: PMC9055460 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.9562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Demographic and Delivery Characteristics of Latina Emergency Medicaid Recipients With Gestational Diabetes by State (2010-2019)
| Characteristic | Latina emergency Medicaid recipients, No./total No. (%) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment (Oregon) (n = 1834 [63.1%]) | Comparison (South Carolina) (n = 1073 [36.9%]) | Overall (N = 2907) | ||||||||
| Before policy change | After policy change | Total | Before policy change | After policy change | Total | Before policy change | After policy change | Total | ||
| Age, y | ||||||||||
| <20 | 6/694 (0.9) | 10/1140 (0.9) | 16/1834 (0.9) | 7/454 (1.5) | 4/619 (0.6) | 11/1073 (1.0) | 13/1148 (1.1) | 14/1759 (0.8) | 27/2907 (0.9) | <.001 |
| 20-24 | 59/694 (8.5) | 71/1140 (6.2) | 130/1834 (7.1) | 35/454 (7.7) | 30/619 (4.8) | 65/1073 (6.1) | 94/1148 (8.2) | 101/1759 (5.7) | 195/2907 (6.7) | |
| 25-34 | 365/694 (52.6) | 522/1140 (45.8) | 887/1834 (48.4) | 287/454 (63.2) | 325/619 (52.5) | 612/1073 (57.0) | 652/1148 (56.8) | 847/1759 (48.2) | 1499/2907 (51.6) | |
| ≥35 | 264/694 (38.0) | 537/1140 (47.1) | 801/1834 (43.7) | 125/454 (27.5) | 260/619 (42.0) | 385/1073 (35.9) | 389/1148 (33.9) | 797/1759 (45.3) | 1186/2907 (40.8) | |
| Rurality | ||||||||||
| Urban | 585/694 (84.3) | 967/1140 (84.8) | 1552/1834 (84.6) | 326/454 (71.8) | 421/619 (68.0) | 747/1073 (69.6) | 911/1148 (79.4) | 1388/1759 (78.9) | 2299/2907 (79.1) | <.001 |
| Rural | 90/694 (13.0) | 141/1140 (12.4) | 231/1834 (12.6) | 88/454 (19.4) | 100/619 (16.2) | 188/1073 (17.5) | 178/1148 (15.5) | 241/1759 (13.7) | 419/2907 (14.4) | |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 29.9 (5.8) | 30.4 (5.9) | 30.2 (5.8) | 29.9 (6.0) | 30.6 (6.5) | 30.3 (6.3) | 29.9 (5.9) | 30.5 (6.1) | 30.2 (6.0) | .69 |
| Multiparous | 601/694 (86.6) | 1019/1140 (89.4) | 1620/1834 (88.3) | 405/454 (89.2) | 601/619 (97.1) | 1006/1073 (93.8) | 1006/1148 (87.6) | 1620/1759 (92.1) | 2626/2907 (90.3) | <.001 |
| Multifetal gestation | 9/694 (1.3) | 14/1140 (1.2) | 23/1834 (1.3) | 2/454 (0.4) | 8/619 (1.3) | 10/1073 (0.9) | 11/1148 (1.0) | 22/1759 (1.3) | 33/2907 (1.1) | .54 |
| History of previous cesarean delivery | 166/694 (23.9) | 295/1140 (25.9) | 461/1834 (25.1) | 118/454 (26.0) | 183/619 (29.6) | 301/1073 (28.1) | 284/1148 (24.7) | 478/1759 (27.2) | 762/2907 (26.2) | .09 |
| Cesarean delivery, current pregnancy | 254/694 (36.6) | 431/1140 (37.8) | 685/1834 (37.4) | 177/454 (39.0) | 236/619 (38.1) | 413/1073 (38.5) | 431/1148 (37.5) | 667/1759 (37.9) | 1098/2907 (37.8) | .57 |
| Pregnancy comorbidities | ||||||||||
| Hypertensive disorder of pregnancy | 53/694 (7.6) | 97/1140 (8.5) | 150/1834 (8.2) | 37/454 (8.1) | 68/619 (11.0) | 105/1073 (9.8) | 90/1148 (7.8) | 165/1759 (9.4) | 255/2907 (8.8) | .16 |
| Chronic hypertension | 26/694 (3.7) | 44/1140 (3.9) | 70/1834 (3.8) | 13/454 (2.9) | 29/619 (4.7) | 42/1073 (3.9) | 39/1148 (3.4) | 73/1759 (4.2) | 112/2907 (3.9) | .98 |
Abbreviation: BMI, body mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared).
Medication Initiation Among Latina Emergency Medicaid Recipients With Gestational Diabetes After Prenatal Care Expansion (2010-2019)
| Medication initiation | Treatment (Oregon) (n = 1640) | Comparison (South Carolina) (n = 930) | Adjusted difference-in-differences estimate, percentage points (95% CI) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants before policy change (n = 617), No. (%) | Participants after policy change (n = 1023), No. (%) | Difference, % | Participants before policy change (n = 387), No. (%) | Participants after policy change (n = 543), No. (%) | Difference, % | ||
| Any antidiabetic medication | 2 (0.3) | 295 (28.8) | 28.5 | 2 (0.5) | 4 (0.7) | 0.2 | 27.9 (24.5-31.2) |
| Insulin | 0 | 1106 (0.4) | 10.4 | 2 (0.5) | 0 | −0.5 | 10.4 (5.3-15.5) |
At any point during pregnancy.
Estimates adjusted for maternal age and body mass index.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .88.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .99.
Maternal and Neonatal Health Outcomes Among Latina Emergency Medicaid Recipients After Expansion of Prenatal Care (2010-2019)
| Outcome | Treatment (Oregon) (n = 1640) | Comparison (South Carolina) (n = 930) | Adjusted difference-in-differences estimate, percentage points (95% CI) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants before policy change (n = 617), No. (%) | Participants after policy change (n = 1023), No. (%) | Difference, % | Participants before policy change (n = 387), No. (%) | Participants after policy change (n = 543), No. (%) | Difference, % | ||
| Gestational hypertension | 45 (7.3) | 81 (7.9) | 0.6 | 29 (7.5) | 57 (10.5) | 3.0 | −2.8 (−7.1 to 1.5) |
| Cesarean birth | 216 (35.0) | 379 (37.0) | 2.0 | 150 (38.8) | 205 (37.8) | −1.0 | 3.8 (−4.8 to 12.4) |
| Postpartum contraception (all) | 0 | 235 (23.0) | 23.0 | 14 (3.6) | 23 (4.2) | 0.6 | 21.2 (14.9 to 27.5) |
| Postpartum sterilization | 0 | 154 (15.1) | 15.1 | 11 (2.8) | 9 (1.7) | −1.1 | 16.1 (10.4 to 21.8) |
| Infant composite morbidity | 176 (28.5) | 186 (26.9) | −1.6 | 117 (30.2) | 186 (34.3) | 4.1 | −4.1 (−12.7 to 4.5) |
At any point during pregnancy.
Estimates adjusted for maternal age and body mass index.
Estimates adjusted for nulliparity.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .51.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .26.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .80.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .44.
Pretest of parallel trends, P = .54.
Figure 1. Difference-in-Differences Estimates of Any Medication Initiation and Insulin Initiation Among Latina Emergency Medicaid Recipients With Gestational Diabetes, 2010-2019
Figure 2. Difference-in-Differences Estimates of Maternal and Neonatal Health Outcomes After Prenatal Care Expansion Among Latina Emergency Medicaid Enrollees With Gestational Diabetes, 2010-2019
The composite outcome of neonatal morbidity includes neonatal intensive care unit admission, preterm birth, and large for gestational age.