移民与剖腹产发生率:智利大流行病背景下的产妇护理和围产期结果。

IF 2.3 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2023-11-22 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2023.1267156
María Begoña Carroza Escobar, Nicole Silva, Jovita Ortíz-Contreras, Rodrigo Villegas, Sergio L Vargas, Claudio Núñez, Luis Felipe Vergara Maldonado, Loreto Paola Villanueva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:智利的移民人数大幅增加。尽管所有孕妇,无论其国籍和移民身份如何,都有权在怀孕、分娩和产后期间获得所有医疗保健服务,但据报道,在医疗保健结果和医疗保健提供方面存在不平等现象。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,这些不平等现象完全不为人知:本研究旨在比较 COVID-19 大流行期间,智利圣地亚哥圣何塞医院根据母亲的移民身份进行剖腹产的发生率,以及其他产妇护理和围产期结果:我们设计了一项回顾性队列研究,研究对象包括 2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 8 月期间在圣何塞医院登记的 10,166 名单胎产妇。为进行组间比较,使用了卡方和费雪精确等统计检验。在对潜在混杂变量进行调整后,采用对数二项式回归模型。使用相对风险来估计关联的强度:移民母亲占登记出生婴儿的 48.1%。本研究报告显示,整个人口的剖腹产率很高,但移民人口的剖腹产率更高。此外,研究还发现移民和非移民在孕产妇护理和围产期结果方面存在差距。需要进行更多的研究来阐明造成这些差异的可能原因,并制定新的法规来保护移民的生殖权利。
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Immigration and C-sections incidence: Maternal care and perinatal outcomes in the context of the pandemic in Chile.

Introduction: Immigration has increased significantly in Chile. Despite that all pregnant women, regardless of nationality and immigration status, have the right to access to all healthcare services during pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum, inequities in health care outcomes and health provision have been reported. During COVID-19 pandemic, these inequities are completely unknown.

Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the incidence of c-sections according to mother's migration status, as well as other maternal care and perinatal outcomes in women giving birth at San José Hospital in Santiago, Chile, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study was designed including 10,166 registered single births at the San José Hospital between March 2020 and August 2021. To compare between groups, statistical tests such as Chi-square and Fisher's exact were used. Log Binomial regression models were performed adjusted for potential confounding variables. To estimate the strength of association the relative risk was used.

Results: Immigrant mothers account for 48.1% of the registered births. Compared to non-immigrant women, immigrants exhibit a higher proportion of c-section, specifically, emergency c-section (28.64% vs. 21.10%; p-value < 0.001) but a lower proportion of and having a preterm birth (8.24% vs. 13.45%; p < 0.05), receiving personalized childbirth care (13.02% vs. 14.60%; p-value < 0.05), companion during labor and childbirth (77.1% vs. 86.95%; p-value < 0.001), And postpartum attachment to newborn (73% vs. 79.50%; p-value < 0.001). The proportion of COVID exposure was not significant between groups, not the severity also. Haitians had a highest risk of undergoing emergency c-section (aRR = 1.61) and Venezuelans had a highest risk of elective c-section (aRR = 2.18) compared to non-immigrants.

Conclusion: This study reports high rates of c-sections in the entire population, but in immigrant populations it is even higher. Additionally, it found gaps in maternal care and perinatal outcomes between immigrants and non-immigrants. More studies are needed to elucidate the possible causes of these differences and establish new regulations to protect the reproductive rights of the immigrant population.

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