Postpartum Access to Health Care and Opioid Use Treatment: An Evaluation of a Medicaid Population.

Q2 Medicine North Carolina Medical Journal Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.18043/001c.125106
Casey Tak, Bayla Ostrach, Melinda Ramage
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Abstract

Background: In this study, we aimed to examine postpartum health care utilization and identify gaps in care among a postpartum Medicaid population of patients diagnosed with opioid use disorder (OUD) during pregnancy.

Methods: We queried North Carolina Medicaid medical and pharmacy claims to identify individuals with a live delivery and evidence of OUD during pregnancy from 2015 to 2019. We examined any evidence of postpartum health care utilization and evidence of medications for OUD (MOUD) during postpartum. We also determined the impact that 4 factors may have had on these outcomes: type of Medicaid coverage (Medicaid for Pregnant Women as compared to other types of Medicaid coverage), rurality, race, and the prenatal use of MOUD. Descriptive statistics, Kaplan-Meier curves with log-rank tests, and negative binomial regression were used.

Results: Of the 6,186 individuals in the study, 84.5% were White, 29.6% lived in rural areas, and 35.0% had MPW coverage. Of the sample, 77.4% sought health care services during the postpartum period. In the multiple negative binomial regression model, individuals who were MPW beneficiaries, non-White, lived in rural areas, and had no evidence of prenatal MOUD all had significantly lower rates of postpartum health care utilization. Of the sample, 53.6% had evidence of MOUD utilization during the postpartum period. We found that patients with MPW continued MOUD at much lower rates compared to patients with other forms of Medicaid (86% versus 93% at 60 days; 57% versus 78% at 180 days, respectively).

Limitations: Limitations to this analysis are inherent to administrative claims data, such as misclassification of outcomes and covariates, as well as loss to follow-up.

Conclusions: Significant gaps in health care use remain across type of Medicaid coverage, race, geographic setting, and prenatal care access.

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产后获得医疗保健和阿片类药物使用治疗:对医疗补助人群的评估。
背景在这项研究中,我们旨在检查产后医疗保健利用情况,并确定产后医疗补助人群中在怀孕期间被诊断出患有阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)的患者的护理差距:我们查询了北卡罗来纳州医疗补助计划(Medicaid)的医疗和药房报销单,以确定在 2015 年至 2019 年期间活产并有证据表明在怀孕期间患有 OUD 的个人。我们检查了产后医疗保健使用的任何证据以及产后期间治疗 OUD (MOUD) 药物的证据。我们还确定了 4 个因素对这些结果可能产生的影响:医疗补助(Medicaid)覆盖类型(孕妇医疗补助与其他类型的医疗补助覆盖相比)、乡村、种族和产前使用 MOUD。研究采用了描述性统计、带有对数秩检验的 Kaplan-Meier 曲线和负二项回归法:在参与研究的 6 186 人中,84.5% 为白人,29.6% 居住在农村地区,35.0% 有 MPW 保险。样本中有 77.4% 的人在产后寻求医疗服务。在多重负二项回归模型中,作为 MPW 受益人、非白人、居住在农村地区以及没有产前 MOUD 证据的个人,其产后医疗保健利用率都明显较低。在样本中,有 53.6% 的人在产后使用过 MOUD。我们发现,与接受其他形式医疗补助的患者相比,接受 MPW 的患者继续使用 MOUD 的比例要低得多(在 60 天内,分别为 86% 对 93%;在 180 天内,分别为 57% 对 78%):本分析的局限性是行政索赔数据所固有的,如结果和协变量的错误分类以及随访损失:在医疗补助覆盖类型、种族、地理环境和产前保健机会方面,医疗保健使用率仍存在巨大差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
North Carolina Medical Journal
North Carolina Medical Journal Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
121
期刊介绍: NCMJ, the North Carolina Medical Journal, is meant to be read by everyone with an interest in improving the health of North Carolinians. We seek to make the Journal a sounding board for new ideas, new approaches, and new policies that will deliver high quality health care, support healthy choices, and maintain a healthy environment in our state.
期刊最新文献
Assessing Local Public Health Governance in North Carolina Across Organizational and Governance Configurations. Behavioral Health Trends Among Perinatal North Carolina Medicaid Beneficiaries. Creating Recovery-Ready Communities. Drug Misuse Among Pediatric Patients: Encounters in the Prehospital Field. Evolution of the Science and Perception of Harm Reduction.
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