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Matern Child Health J ; 27(Suppl 1): 113-121, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37851151

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this field report is to describe an evaluation of the fidelity with which the comprehensive addiction and recovery act (CARA) policy has been implemented in New Mexico. DESCRIPTION: The CARA program in New Mexico focuses on providing nonpunitive supportive care for pregnant people affected by substance use and on coordinating services for parents, caregivers, and family members of newborns affected by substance exposure. The evaluation used information from program reports, a family follow-up survey, the plan of safe care database, and a data linkage between CARA participant records with Medicaid claims data. RESULTS: Follow-up survey data substantiated the program reports. Both sources showed that families were not engaged consistently in developing or receiving information about plans of safe care. The survey answers also indicated that the time-period immediately after the delivery of a baby is not the best time to communicate the contents of the plan of safe care to families. Additionally, the survey found that respondents believed that medical staff judged them for using substances during pregnancy. The Medicaid data linkage showed that 40.3% of families of infants exposed to substances in-utero did not receive a plan of safe care. Program reports revealed that limited resources existed for implementing CARA. CONCLUSION: Program funding, limited system capacity, lack of systematic screening for prenatal substance use, regional differences in access to care, and provider biases toward pregnant people using substances affected health-care workers' ability to identify at-risk families and develop plans of safe care. To support CARA implementation, healthcare systems must implement universal prenatal substance use screening, increase the level of anti-bias training pertaining to substance use, increase hospital supports, and improve data management systems.


What is already known on this subject? Stigma towards pregnant people for maternal substance use reduces access to prenatal care due to fear of involvement from child protective services. Punitive approaches to perinatal substance use result in lower healthcare utilization and opportunities to treat substance use disorder. What this study adds? This field report evaluates the implementation of a non-punitive state level policy meant to increase services for pregnant people using substances and reduce reports to child protective services for abuse neglect due to infants exposed to substances prenatally.


Subject(s)
Substance-Related Disorders , Pregnancy , Infant , Female , Infant, Newborn , Humans , New Mexico , Policy , Family
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