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1.
JAMA Netw Open ; 7(7): e2422500, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39012630

ABSTRACT

Importance: More than 30% of pregnant people have at least 1 chronic medical condition, and nearly 20% develop gestational diabetes or pregnancy-related hypertension, increasing the risk of future chronic disease. While these individuals are often monitored closely during pregnancy, they face major barriers when transitioning to primary care following delivery, due in part to a lack of health care support for this transition. Objective: To evaluate the impact of an intervention designed to improve postpartum primary care engagement by reducing patient administrative burden and information gaps. Design, Setting, and Participants: An individual-level randomized clinical trial was conducted from November 3, 2022, to October 11, 2023, at 1 hospital-based and 5 community-based outpatient obstetric clinics affiliated with a large academic medical center. Participants included English- and Spanish-speaking pregnant or recently postpartum adults with obesity, anxiety, depression, diabetes, chronic hypertension, gestational diabetes, or pregnancy-related hypertension and a primary care practitioner (PCP) listed in their electronic health record. Intervention: A behavioral economics-informed intervention bundle, including default scheduling of postpartum PCP appointments and tailored messages. Main Outcome and Measures: Completion of a PCP visit for routine or chronic condition care within 4 months of delivery was the primary outcome, ascertained directly by reviewing the patient's electronic health record approximately 5 months after their estimated due date. Intention-to-treat analysis was conducted. Results: A total of 360 patients were randomized (control, 176; intervention, 184). Individuals had a mean (SD) age of 34.1 (4.9) years and median gestational age of 36.3 (IQR, 34.0-38.6) weeks at enrollment. The distribution of self-reported race and ethnicity was 6.8% Asian, 7.4% Black, 68.6% White, and 15.0% multiple races or other. Most participants (75.4%) had anxiety or depression, 16.1% had a chronic or pregnancy-related hypertensive disorder, 19.5% had preexisting or gestational diabetes, and 40.8% had a prepregnancy body mass index of 30 or greater. Medicaid was the primary payer for 21.2% of patients. Primary care practitioner visit completion within 4 months occurred in 22.0% (95% CI, 6.4%-28.8%) of individuals in the control group and 40.0% (95% CI, 33.1%-47.4%) in the intervention group. In regression models accounting for randomization strata, the intervention increased PCP visit completion by 18.7 percentage points (95% CI, 9.1-28.2 percentage points). Intervention participants also had fewer postpartum readmissions (1.7% vs 5.8%) and increased receipt of the following services by a PCP: blood pressure screening (42.8% vs 28.3%), weight assessment (42.8% vs 27.7%), and depression screening (32.8% vs 16.8%). Conclusions and Relevance: The findings of this randomized clinical trial suggest that the current lack of support for postpartum transitions to primary care is a missed opportunity to improve recently pregnant individual's short- and long-term health. Reducing patient administrative burdens may represent relatively low-resource, high-impact approaches to improving postpartum health and well-being. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05543265.


Subject(s)
Primary Health Care , Humans , Female , Adult , Pregnancy , Postpartum Period/psychology , Appointments and Schedules , Chronic Disease , Diabetes, Gestational/psychology , Postnatal Care/methods
2.
medRxiv ; 2024 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38633772

ABSTRACT

Importance: Over 30% of pregnant people have at least one chronic medical condition, and nearly 20% develop gestational diabetes or pregnancy-related hypertension, increasing the risk of future chronic disease. While these individuals are often monitored closely during pregnancy, they face significant barriers when transitioning to primary care following delivery, due in part to a lack of health care support for this transition. Objective: To evaluate the impact of an intervention designed to improve postpartum primary care engagement by reducing patient administrative burden and information gaps. Design: Individual-level randomized controlled trial conducted from November 3, 2022 to October 11, 2023. Setting: One hospital-based and five community-based outpatient obstetric clinics affiliated with a large academic medical center. Participants: Participants included English- and Spanish-speaking pregnant or recently postpartum adults with obesity, anxiety, depression, diabetes mellitus, chronic hypertension, gestational diabetes, or pregnancy-related hypertension, and a primary care practitioner (PCP) listed in their electronic health record (EHR). Intervention: A behavioral economics-informed intervention bundle, including default scheduling of postpartum PCP appointments and tailored messages. Main Outcome: Completion of a PCP visit for routine or chronic condition care within 4 months of delivery. Results: 360 patients were randomized (Control: N=176, Intervention: N=184). Individuals had mean (SD) age 34.1 (4.9) years and median gestational age of 36.3 weeks (interquartile range (IQR) 34.0-38.6 weeks) at enrollment. The distribution of self-reported races was 7.4% Asian, 6.8% Black, 15.0% multiple races or "Other," and 68.6% White. Most (75.8%) participants had anxiety or depression, 15.9% had a chronic or pregnancy-related hypertensive disorder, 19.8% had pre-existing or gestational diabetes, and 40.4% had a pre-pregnancy BMI ≥30 kg/m2. Medicaid was the primary payer for 21.9% of patients. PCP visit completion within 4 months occurred in 22.0% in the control group and 40.0% in the intervention group. In regression models accounting for randomization strata, the intervention increased PCP visit completion by 18.7 percentage points (95%CI 10.7-29.1). Intervention participants also had fewer postpartum readmissions (1.7 vs. 5.8%) and increased receipt of the following services by a PCP: blood pressure screening (42.8 vs. 28.3%), weight assessment (42.8 vs. 27.7%), and depression screening (32.8 vs. 16.8%). Conclusions and Relevance: In this randomized trial of pregnant individuals with or at risk for chronic health conditions, default PCP visit scheduling, tailored messages, and reminders substantially improved postpartum primary care engagement. The current lack of support for postpartum transitions to primary care is a missed opportunity to improve recently pregnant individual's short- and long-term health. Reducing patient administrative burdens may represent relatively low-resource, high-impact approaches to improving postpartum health and wellbeing. Trial Registration: NCT05543265.

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