Division of Health Policy and Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Womens Health Issues. 2018 May-Jun;28(3):224-231. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2017.11.008. Epub 2017 Dec 19.
In 2011, Oregon implemented a policy that reduced the state's rate of early (before 39 weeks' gestation) elective (without medical need) births.
This analysis measured differential policy effects by race, examining whether Oregon's policy was associated with changes in non-Hispanic Black-White disparities in early elective cesarean and labor induction.
We used Oregon birth certificate data, defining prepolicy (2008-2010) and postpolicy (2012-2014) periods, including non-Hispanic Black and White women who gave birth during these periods (n = 121,272). We used longitudinal spline models to assess policy impacts by race and probability models to measure policy-associated changes in Black-White disparities.
We found that the prepolicy Black-White differences in early elective cesarean (6.1% vs. 4.3%) were eliminated after policy implementation (2.8% vs. 2.5%); adjusted models show decreases in the odds of elective early cesarean among Black women after the policy change (adjusted odds ratio, 0.47; 95% confidence interval, 0.22-1.00; p = .050) and among White women (adjusted odds ratio, 0.79; 95% confidence interval, 0.67-0.93; p = .006). Adjusted probability models indicated that policy implementation resulted in a 1.75-percentage point narrowing (p = .011) in the Black-White disparity in early elective cesarean. Early elective induction also decreased, from 4.9% and 4.7% for non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic White women to 3.8% and 2.5%, respectively; the policy was not associated with a statistically significant change in disparities.
A statewide policy reduced racial disparities in early elective cesarean, but not early elective induction. Attention to differential policy effects by race may reveal changes in disparities, even when that is not the intended focus of the policy.
2011 年,俄勒冈州实施了一项政策,降低了该州早期(39 周前)选择性(无医疗需要)分娩的比例。
本分析通过种族来衡量政策的差异效应,检验俄勒冈州的政策是否与非西班牙裔黑人和白人之间早期选择性剖宫产和引产的差异发生变化有关。
我们使用俄勒冈州出生证明数据,定义了政策前(2008-2010 年)和政策后(2012-2014 年)两个时期,包括在此期间分娩的非西班牙裔黑人和白人妇女(n=121272)。我们使用纵向样条模型评估种族的政策影响,并使用概率模型衡量政策相关的黑人和白人之间差异的变化。
我们发现,政策实施后,早期选择性剖宫产的黑人和白人之间的差异(6.1%比 4.3%)消失(2.8%比 2.5%);调整后的模型显示,政策变化后黑人妇女选择早期剖宫产的几率下降(调整后的优势比,0.47;95%置信区间,0.22-1.00;p=0.050),白人妇女的几率也下降(调整后的优势比,0.79;95%置信区间,0.67-0.93;p=0.006)。调整后的概率模型表明,政策实施导致早期选择性剖宫产的黑人和白人之间的差距缩小了 1.75 个百分点(p=0.011)。早期选择性引产也有所减少,从非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人妇女的 4.9%和 4.7%分别降至 3.8%和 2.5%;该政策与差异无统计学意义的变化相关。
全州范围内的政策减少了早期选择性剖宫产的种族差异,但对早期选择性引产没有影响。关注种族的政策差异效应可能会揭示差异的变化,即使这不是政策的预期重点。