Noddin Katie, Bradley Dani, Wolfberg Adam
Ovia Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Cambridge Hospital, Cambridge, MA, United States.
JMIR Pediatr Parent. 2021 Oct 4;4(4):e27769. doi: 10.2196/27769.
The COVID-19 pandemic has presented obstacles for providers and patients in the maternal health care setting, causing changes to many pregnant women's birth plans, as well as abrupt changes in hospital labor and delivery policies and procedures. Few data exist on the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the maternal health care landscape at the national level in the United States.
The aim of this study is to assess the incidence of key obstetrics outcomes (preterm delivery, Cesarean sections, and home births) and length of hospital stay during the COVID-19 pandemic as compared to the 6 months prior.
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of women aged 18-44 years in the United States who delivered between October 1, 2019, and September 30, 2020, had singleton deliveries, and completed a birth report in the Ovia Pregnancy mobile app. Women were assigned to the prepandemic cohort if they delivered between October 2019 and March 2020, and the pandemic cohort if they delivered between April and September 2020. Gestational age at delivery, delivery method, delivery facility type, and length of hospital stay were compared.
A total of 304,023 birth reports were collected, with 152,832 (50.26%) in the prepandemic cohort and 151,191 (49.73%) in the pandemic cohort. Compared to the prepandemic cohort, principal findings indicate a 5.67% decrease in preterm delivery rates in the pandemic cohort (P<.001; odds ratio [OR] 0.94, 95% CI 0.91-0.96), a 30.0% increase in home birth rates (P<.001; OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.23-1.4), and a 7.81% decrease in the average hospital length of stay postdelivery (mean 2.48 days, SD 1.35). There were no overall changes in Cesarean section rates between cohorts, but differences were observed between age, race, and ethnicity subgroups.
Results suggest a need for continuous monitoring of maternal health trends as the COVID-19 pandemic progresses and underline the important role of digital data collection, particularly during the pandemic.
新冠疫情给孕产妇保健领域的医护人员和患者带来了诸多障碍,导致许多孕妇的分娩计划发生改变,同时医院的分娩政策和程序也出现了突然变化。在美国,关于新冠疫情对全国孕产妇保健格局影响的数据很少。
本研究的目的是评估新冠疫情期间与之前6个月相比,关键产科结局(早产、剖宫产和家庭分娩)的发生率以及住院时间。
我们对2019年10月1日至2020年9月30日期间在美国分娩、单胎分娩且在Ovia Pregnancy移动应用程序中完成分娩报告的18 - 44岁女性进行了一项回顾性队列研究。如果女性在2019年10月至2020年3月期间分娩,则被分配到疫情前队列;如果在2020年4月至9月期间分娩,则被分配到疫情队列。比较了分娩时的孕周、分娩方式、分娩机构类型和住院时间。
共收集到304,023份分娩报告,其中疫情前队列有152,832份(50.26%),疫情队列有151,191份(49.73%)。与疫情前队列相比,主要结果表明疫情队列中早产率下降了5.67%(P <.001;优势比[OR] 0.94,95%置信区间0.91 - 0.96),家庭分娩率上升了30.0%(P <.001;OR 1.3,95%置信区间1.23 - 1.4),产后平均住院时间减少了7.81%(平均2.48天,标准差1.35)。队列之间剖宫产率没有总体变化,但在年龄、种族和族裔亚组之间观察到了差异。
结果表明,随着新冠疫情的发展,需要持续监测孕产妇健康趋势,并强调数字数据收集的重要作用,尤其是在疫情期间。