Shi Leiyu, Stevens Gregory D, Wulu John T, Politzer Robert M, Xu Jiahong
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2004 Dec;39(6 Pt 1):1881-901. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2004.00323.x.
To examine whether community health centers (CHCs) reduce racial/ethnic disparities in perinatal care and birth outcomes, and to identify CHC characteristics associated with better outcomes.
Despite great national wealth, the U.S. continues to rank poorly relative to other industrialized nations on infant mortality and other birth outcomes, and with wide inequities by race/ethnicity. Disparities in primary care (including perinatal care) may contribute to disparities in birth outcomes, which may be addressed by CHCs that provide safety-net medical services to vulnerable populations.
Data are from annual Uniform Data System reports submitted to the Bureau of Primary Health Care over six years (1996-2001) by about 700 CHCs each year.
Across all years, about 60% of CHC mothers received first-trimester prenatal care and more than 70% received postpartum and newborn care. In 2001, Asian mothers were the most likely to receive both postpartum and newborn care (81.7% and 80.3%), followed by Hispanics (75.0% and 76.3%), blacks (70.8% and 69.9%), and whites (70.7% and 66.7%). In 2001, blacks had higher rates of low birth weight (LBW) babies (10.4%), but the disparity in rates for blacks and whites was smaller in CHCs (3.3 percentage points) compared to national disparities for low-socioeconomic status mothers (5.8 percentage points) and the total population (6.2 percentage points). In CHCs, greater perinatal care capacity was associated with higher rates of first-trimester prenatal care, which was associated with a lower LBW rate.
Racial/ethnic disparities in certain prenatal services and birth outcomes may be lower in CHCs compared to the general population, despite serving higher-risk groups. Within CHCs, increasing first-trimester prenatal care use through perinatal care capacity may lead to further improvement in birth outcomes for the underserved.
研究社区卫生中心(CHC)是否能减少围产期护理及分娩结局方面的种族/民族差异,并确定与更好结局相关的CHC特征。
尽管国家财富丰厚,但美国在婴儿死亡率及其他分娩结局方面相对于其他工业化国家仍排名靠后,且存在严重的种族/民族不平等。初级保健(包括围产期护理)方面的差异可能导致分娩结局的差异,而提供安全网医疗服务给弱势群体的CHC或许可以解决这一问题。
数据来自约700家CHC每年(1996 - 2001年)连续六年提交给初级卫生保健局的年度统一数据系统报告。
在所有年份中,约60%的CHC产妇接受了孕早期产前护理,超过70%接受了产后及新生儿护理。2001年,亚裔产妇接受产后及新生儿护理的比例最高(分别为81.7%和80.3%),其次是西班牙裔(75.0%和76.3%)、黑人(70.8%和69.9%)以及白人(70.7%和66.7%)。2001年,黑人低体重(LBW)儿出生率较高(10.4%),但与白人相比,CHC中黑人和白人的出生率差异(3.3个百分点)小于社会经济地位较低母亲群体的全国差异(5.8个百分点)以及总人口差异(6.2个百分点)。在CHC中,更高的围产期护理能力与更高的孕早期产前护理率相关,而这又与更低的LBW率相关。
尽管CHC服务的是高风险群体,但与普通人群相比,某些产前服务及分娩结局方面的种族/民族差异可能更低。在CHC内部,通过围产期护理能力增加孕早期产前护理的使用,可能会使服务不足人群的分娩结局得到进一步改善。