Department of Family Medicine and Biobehavioral Health, University of Minnesota Medical School Duluth campus, Duluth, Minnesota.
University of Minnesota Medical School Duluth campus, Duluth, Minnesota.
J Rural Health. 2021 Mar;37(2):362-372. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12478. Epub 2020 Jun 30.
With decreasing access to rural obstetrical care, this study aimed to identify factors that contribute to the ability of Minnesota's rural communities to continue to offer obstetrical services locally. The study also sought to characterize attributes that differentiate rural communities that continue to offer obstetrical care from those that do not.
Family medicine physicians practicing in communities of fewer than 20,000 people were interviewed through a phone survey that included multiple choice and open-ended questions. Quantitative and qualitative analyses were performed on data collected from the responses.
Within the Minnesota communities represented (N = 25), prenatal care was provided broadly, regardless of whether labor and delivery services were available. For the communities providing local labor and delivery (N = 17), several factors seemed to be key to sustaining these services: having a sufficient cohort of delivering providers, having surgical backup, having accessible confident nurses and nurse anesthetists, sustaining a sufficient annual birth volume at the hospital, and having organizational and administrative support. In addition, supporting anesthesia and analgesic services, access to specialist consultation, having resources for managing and referring both newborn and maternal complications, and sustaining proper equipment were also requisite.
Rural Minnesota family medicine physicians practicing in communities providing local labor and delivery care emphasized several essential components for sustainable provision of these services. With awareness of these essential components, rural health care providers, administrators, and policy makers can focus resources and initiatives on efforts that are most likely to support a sustainable and coordinated rural labor and delivery program.
随着农村产科医疗服务的减少,本研究旨在确定有助于明尼苏达州农村社区继续在当地提供产科服务的因素。该研究还试图描述能够区分继续提供产科护理和不提供产科护理的农村社区的特征。
通过电话调查对少于 20000 人的社区的家庭医生进行了访谈,电话调查包括多项选择和开放式问题。对从回答中收集的数据进行了定量和定性分析。
在所代表的明尼苏达州社区中(N=25),无论是否提供分娩和分娩服务,都广泛提供产前护理。对于提供本地分娩服务的社区(N=17),有几个因素似乎是维持这些服务的关键:有足够数量的分娩提供者、有手术后备、有可及的有信心的护士和麻醉师、维持医院足够的年度分娩量、以及有组织和行政支持。此外,支持麻醉和镇痛服务、获得专家咨询、拥有管理和转介新生儿和产妇并发症的资源,以及维持适当的设备也是必要的。
在提供本地分娩护理的社区中,明尼苏达州农村的家庭医生强调了可持续提供这些服务的几个基本组成部分。了解这些基本组成部分,农村医疗保健提供者、管理人员和政策制定者可以将资源和举措集中在最有可能支持可持续和协调的农村分娩计划的努力上。