New Mexico Department of Health, 2040 S. Pacheco, Santa Fe, NM, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2023 Dec;27(Suppl 1):113-121. doi: 10.1007/s10995-023-03787-1. Epub 2023 Oct 18.
The purpose of this field report is to describe an evaluation of the fidelity with which the comprehensive addiction and recovery act (CARA) policy has been implemented in New Mexico.
The CARA program in New Mexico focuses on providing nonpunitive supportive care for pregnant people affected by substance use and on coordinating services for parents, caregivers, and family members of newborns affected by substance exposure. The evaluation used information from program reports, a family follow-up survey, the plan of safe care database, and a data linkage between CARA participant records with Medicaid claims data.
Follow-up survey data substantiated the program reports. Both sources showed that families were not engaged consistently in developing or receiving information about plans of safe care. The survey answers also indicated that the time-period immediately after the delivery of a baby is not the best time to communicate the contents of the plan of safe care to families. Additionally, the survey found that respondents believed that medical staff judged them for using substances during pregnancy. The Medicaid data linkage showed that 40.3% of families of infants exposed to substances in-utero did not receive a plan of safe care. Program reports revealed that limited resources existed for implementing CARA.
Program funding, limited system capacity, lack of systematic screening for prenatal substance use, regional differences in access to care, and provider biases toward pregnant people using substances affected health-care workers' ability to identify at-risk families and develop plans of safe care. To support CARA implementation, healthcare systems must implement universal prenatal substance use screening, increase the level of anti-bias training pertaining to substance use, increase hospital supports, and improve data management systems.
本现场报告旨在评估新墨西哥州全面成瘾和康复法案(CARA)的实施情况。
新墨西哥州的 CARA 计划侧重于为受药物使用影响的孕妇提供非惩罚性支持性护理,并协调为受药物暴露影响的新生儿的父母、照顾者和家庭成员提供服务。该评估使用了来自项目报告、家庭随访调查、安全护理计划数据库以及 CARA 参与者记录与医疗补助索赔数据之间的数据链接的信息。
随访调查数据证实了项目报告。两个来源都表明,家庭没有持续参与制定或接收有关安全护理计划的信息。调查答案还表明,婴儿出生后立即不是向家庭传达安全护理计划内容的最佳时间。此外,调查发现,受访者认为医务人员因他们在怀孕期间使用物质而对他们进行了评判。医疗补助数据链接显示,40.3%的胎儿暴露于物质的婴儿的家庭没有收到安全护理计划。项目报告显示,实施 CARA 的资源有限。
项目资金、系统能力有限、缺乏系统的产前物质使用筛查、获得护理的区域差异以及提供者对使用物质的孕妇的偏见影响了医疗保健工作者识别高危家庭和制定安全护理计划的能力。为了支持 CARA 的实施,医疗保健系统必须实施普遍的产前物质使用筛查,增加与物质使用相关的反偏见培训水平,增加医院支持,并改善数据管理系统。