Health service use and outcomes among disabled Medicaid pregnant women
Purpose
We investigated differences in health service use and pregnancy outcomes among women enrolled in Medicaid under eligibility categories for the blind and disabled and those enrolled under other eligibility categories.
Methods
We used Medicaid enrollment and claims data to create episodes of pregnancy- and delivery-related care for women with and without disabilities who had Medicaid-covered deliveries in Florida, Georgia, and New Jersey during 1995 and Texas during 1997. We linked birth certificate information on prenatal care and birth outcomes to the files for Georgia and Texas. We then computed the unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios for the receipt of selected routine prenatal and illness-related services and the occurrence of selected pregnancy outcomes among women with disabilities relative to women without disabilities.
Findings
In all states, women with disabilities were more likely than women without disabilities to have had continuous Medicaid coverage from preconception through the postnatal period. Women with disabilities were equally or less likely to have received adequate prenatal care compared to women without disabilities in the two study states with these data. They were also more likely to have had emergency room visits, hospital admissions during pregnancy, cesarean deliveries, and readmissions within 3 months of delivery in all study states. We also found women with disabilities to have been more likely to deliver preterm and low birthweight infants.
Conclusion
Our results suggest that opportunities exist to improve access to prenatal care among women with disabilities enrolled in Medicaid under blind and disabled eligibility categories who become pregnant.
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Funded through contract number 500-96-0018 with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The Texas claims and birth certificate data were provided by the Texas Department of Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration. The Georgia birth certificate data and linkage to the claims data were provided by the Georgia Department of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Manuscript preparation was funded by RTI International.
PII: S1049-3867(06)00113-7
doi:10.1016/j.whi.2006.10.003
© 2006 Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
