Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Public Health Services, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Contraception. 2022 Aug;112:105-110. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2022.02.009. Epub 2022 Mar 3.
Catholic hospitals restrict access to comprehensive reproductive health services that could impact patient outcomes. We sought to determine whether delivery at a Catholic hospital is associated with shorter pregnancy intervals among patients insured by Medicaid in Illinois.
We used Illinois Medicaid data files to conduct a retrospective cohort study. We used billing codes to identify deliveries in 2010 and 2011 and classified each by a hospital of delivery, maternal age, race/ethnicity, and residential zip code. We calculated the interval from index birth to subsequent conception using an established method and used Cox proportional hazards regression to compare the rate of subsequent pregnancy between enrollees who delivered in Catholic vs non-Catholic hospitals, adjusting for individual characteristics. We also computed differences in the rates of conception within 6-, 12-, and 18-month intervals.
We identified 96,293 index births and 18,627 subsequent conceptions. Twenty-eight percent (26,775) of index births occurred in a Catholic hospital. Women who delivered in a Catholic hospital had a 12% greater risk of conception in the following 18 months (HR 1.12, 95% CI 1.09-1.16) after adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, and rural residence. At 18 months, 23.9% of enrollees delivering in a Catholic hospital had become pregnant as compared to 21.2% for enrollees delivering in a non-Catholic hospital (difference of 2.6%, 95% CI 1.8-3.6).
Illinois Medicaid enrollees who deliver at Catholic hospitals have an increased risk of short-interval pregnancy. As the market share of Catholic hospitals grows, providers must work with patients to acknowledge and address these potential impacts on reproductive health outcomes and policies must change to promote equitable access.
Delivery at a Catholic hospital is associated with an increased risk of short-interval pregnancy. Further attention from providers, researchers, and policymakers alike, is necessary to identify the mechanisms through which these differences manifest such that effective interventions can be developed.
天主教会医院限制提供全面的生殖健康服务,这可能会影响患者的治疗效果。我们试图确定在伊利诺伊州,接受医疗补助的患者在天主教会医院分娩是否与妊娠间隔时间较短有关。
我们使用伊利诺伊州医疗补助数据文件进行回顾性队列研究。我们使用计费代码来识别 2010 年和 2011 年的分娩,并根据分娩医院、产妇年龄、种族/族裔和居住邮政编码对每个分娩进行分类。我们使用一种既定的方法计算从指数分娩到后续受孕的间隔时间,并使用 Cox 比例风险回归来比较在天主教医院和非天主教医院分娩的患者后续妊娠的发生率,同时调整个体特征。我们还计算了在 6 个月、12 个月和 18 个月间隔内受孕率的差异。
我们确定了 96293 次指数分娩和 18627 次后续受孕。28%(26775 次)的指数分娩发生在天主教医院。在调整年龄、种族/族裔和农村居住后,在天主教医院分娩的女性在接下来的 18 个月内受孕的风险增加了 12%(HR 1.12,95%CI 1.09-1.16)。在 18 个月时,在天主教医院分娩的患者中有 23.9%已经怀孕,而在非天主教医院分娩的患者中有 21.2%(差异为 2.6%,95%CI 1.8-3.6)。
在伊利诺伊州医疗补助计划中,在天主教会医院分娩的患者有更高的短期怀孕风险。随着天主教会医院市场份额的增长,提供者必须与患者合作,承认并解决这些对生殖健康结果的潜在影响,政策必须改变以促进公平获得。
在天主教会医院分娩与短期怀孕风险增加有关。提供者、研究人员和政策制定者都需要进一步关注,以确定这些差异表现出来的机制,以便能够制定有效的干预措施。