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Do women living in a deprived neighborhood have higher maternity care costs and worse pregnancy outcomes? A retrospective population-based study
by
Nanninga, Eline K.
, van der Hijden, Eric J. E.
, Portrait, France R. M.
, Menting, Malou D.
in
Analysis
/ Cesarean Section
/ Costs
/ Deprived neighborhoods
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health aspects
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Informatics
/ Health insurance industry
/ Humans
/ Hypertension
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal child nursing
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternity care
/ Medical care, Cost of
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nursing Research
/ Obstetrics
/ Outdoor air quality
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Payment systems
/ Perinatal costs
/ Poor women
/ Population-based studies
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Outcome - epidemiology
/ Pregnant women
/ Premature birth
/ Premature Birth - epidemiology
/ Prenatal care
/ Primary care
/ Public Health
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Womens health
2024
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Do women living in a deprived neighborhood have higher maternity care costs and worse pregnancy outcomes? A retrospective population-based study
by
Nanninga, Eline K.
, van der Hijden, Eric J. E.
, Portrait, France R. M.
, Menting, Malou D.
in
Analysis
/ Cesarean Section
/ Costs
/ Deprived neighborhoods
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health aspects
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Informatics
/ Health insurance industry
/ Humans
/ Hypertension
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal child nursing
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternity care
/ Medical care, Cost of
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nursing Research
/ Obstetrics
/ Outdoor air quality
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Payment systems
/ Perinatal costs
/ Poor women
/ Population-based studies
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Outcome - epidemiology
/ Pregnant women
/ Premature birth
/ Premature Birth - epidemiology
/ Prenatal care
/ Primary care
/ Public Health
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Womens health
2024
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Do women living in a deprived neighborhood have higher maternity care costs and worse pregnancy outcomes? A retrospective population-based study
by
Nanninga, Eline K.
, van der Hijden, Eric J. E.
, Portrait, France R. M.
, Menting, Malou D.
in
Analysis
/ Cesarean Section
/ Costs
/ Deprived neighborhoods
/ Diagnosis related groups
/ DRGs
/ Economic aspects
/ Female
/ Health Administration
/ Health aspects
/ Health care expenditures
/ Health care policy
/ Health Informatics
/ Health insurance industry
/ Humans
/ Hypertension
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal child nursing
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternity care
/ Medical care, Cost of
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Neighborhoods
/ Nursing Research
/ Obstetrics
/ Outdoor air quality
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Payment systems
/ Perinatal costs
/ Poor women
/ Population-based studies
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Outcome - epidemiology
/ Pregnant women
/ Premature birth
/ Premature Birth - epidemiology
/ Prenatal care
/ Primary care
/ Public Health
/ Retrospective Studies
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Womens health
2024
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Do women living in a deprived neighborhood have higher maternity care costs and worse pregnancy outcomes? A retrospective population-based study
Journal Article
Do women living in a deprived neighborhood have higher maternity care costs and worse pregnancy outcomes? A retrospective population-based study
2024
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Overview
Background
Living in a deprived neighborhood is associated with poorer health, due to factors such as lower socio-economic status and an adverse lifestyle. There is little insight into whether living in deprived neighborhood is associated with adverse maternity care outcomes and maternity health care costs. We expect women in a deprived neighborhood to experience a more complicated pregnancy, with more secondary obstetric care (as opposed to primary midwifery care) and higher maternity care costs. This study aimed to answer the following research question: to what extent are moment of referral from primary to secondary care, mode of delivery, (extreme or very) preterm delivery and maternity care costs associated with neighborhood deprivation?
Methods
This retrospective cohort study used a national Dutch database with healthcare claims processed by health insurers. All pregnancies that started in 2018 were included. The moment of referral from primary to secondary care, mode of delivery, (extreme or very) preterm delivery and maternity care costs were compared between women in deprived and non-deprived neighborhoods. We reported descriptive statistics, and results of ordinal logistic, multinomial and linear regressions to assess whether differences between the two groups exist.
Results
Women in deprived neighborhoods had higher odds of being referred from primary to secondary care during pregnancy (adjusted OR 1.49, 95%CI 1.41–1.57) and to start their pregnancy in secondary care (adjusted OR 1.55, 95%CI 1.44–1.66). Furthermore, women in deprived neighborhoods had lower odds of assisted delivery than women in non-deprived neighborhoods (adjusted OR 0.73, 95%CI 0.66–0.80), and they had higher odds of a cesarean section (adjusted OR 1.19, 95%CI 1.13–1.25). On average, women in a deprived neighborhood had higher maternity care costs worth 156 euros (95%CI 104–208).
Conclusion
This study showed that living in a deprived neighborhood is associated with more intensive maternal care and higher maternal care costs in the Netherlands. These findings support the needs for greater attention to socio-economic factors in maternity care in the Netherlands.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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