School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, 2121 Berkeley Way, Room, 6124, Berkeley, Ca, 94720-7360, USA.
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley Class of 2025, 2121 Berkeley Way West, Berkeley, Ca, 94720-7360, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024 Jul 25;24(1):502. doi: 10.1186/s12884-024-06705-7.
Professional societies such as the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) promote the idea that postpartum care is an ongoing process where there is adequate opportunity to provide services and support. Nonetheless, in practice, the guidelines ask clinicians to perform more clinical responsibilities than they might be able to do with limited time and resources.
We conducted an online survey among practicing obstetric clinicians (obstetrician/gynecologists (OB/GYNs), midwives, and family medicine doctors) in California about their priorities and care practices for the first postpartum visit and explored how they prioritize multiple clinical responsibilities within existing time and resources. Between September 2023 and February 2024, 174 out of 229 eligible participants completed the survey, a 76% response rate. From a list of care components, we used descriptive statistics to identify those that were highly prioritized by most clinicians and those that were considered a priority by very few and examined the alignment between prioritized components and recommended care practices.
Clinicians were highly invested in the care components that they rated as most important, indicating that they always check these components or assess them when they perceive patient need. Depression and anxiety, breast health/breast feeding issues, vaginal birth complications and family planning counseling were highly ranked components by all clinicians. In contrast, clinicians more often did not assess those care components that infrequently ranked highly among the priority listing, consisting mainly of social drivers of health such as screening and counseling for intimate partner violence, working conditions and food/housing insecurity. In both instances, we found little discordance between priorities and care practices. However, OB/GYNs and midwives differed in some care components that they prioritized highly.
While there is growing understanding of how important professional society recommendations are for maternal-infant health, clinicians face barriers completing all recommendations, especially those components related to social drivers of health. However, what the clinicians do prioritize highly, they are likely to perform. Now that Medi-Cal (Medicaid) insurance is available in California for up to 12 months postpartum, there is a need to understand what care clinicians provide and what gaps remain.
美国妇产科医师学会(ACOG)等专业学会提倡产后护理是一个持续的过程,有足够的机会提供服务和支持。尽管如此,在实践中,这些指南要求临床医生在有限的时间和资源内履行更多的临床责任。
我们对加利福尼亚州的执业产科临床医生(妇产科医生/妇科医生、助产士和家庭医生)进行了一项关于他们对产后首次就诊的优先事项和护理实践的在线调查,并探讨了他们如何在现有时间和资源内优先考虑多项临床责任。在 2023 年 9 月至 2024 年 2 月期间,229 名符合条件的参与者中有 174 名完成了调查,应答率为 76%。从一系列护理组成部分中,我们使用描述性统计数据来确定那些被大多数临床医生高度重视的部分和那些被极少数人认为是优先事项的部分,并检查了优先事项组成部分与推荐的护理实践之间的一致性。
临床医生非常关注他们认为最重要的护理组成部分,这表明他们总是检查这些组成部分,或者在他们认为患者有需求时评估这些组成部分。抑郁和焦虑、乳房健康/母乳喂养问题、阴道分娩并发症和计划生育咨询是所有临床医生高度重视的组成部分。相比之下,临床医生更经常不会评估那些在优先清单上排名较低的护理组成部分,这些组成部分主要包括健康的社会驱动因素,如亲密伴侣暴力、工作条件和食品/住房不安全的筛查和咨询。在这两种情况下,我们发现优先事项和护理实践之间几乎没有不一致。然而,妇产科医生和助产士在他们高度重视的一些护理组成部分上存在差异。
虽然越来越多的人认识到专业学会的建议对母婴健康的重要性,但临床医生在完成所有建议方面面临障碍,尤其是那些与健康的社会驱动因素相关的建议。然而,临床医生确实高度重视的部分,他们很可能会执行。现在,加利福尼亚州的 Medi-Cal(医疗补助)保险可在产后长达 12 个月内使用,因此有必要了解临床医生提供的护理内容以及仍存在哪些差距。