Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2024 Mar;230(3):347.e1-347.e11. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2023.10.039. Epub 2023 Oct 30.
Medicaid, unlike any other insurance mechanism, imposes a consent requirement on female patients desiring sterilization that must be completed at least 30 days, but no more than 180 days, before sterilization. Desired sterilization cannot be completed in the Medicaid population without this consent. Large-scale national evidence is lacking on the effect of this requirement.
This study aimed to explore the influence of insurance status on the achievement of postpartum sterilization after a self-reported unwanted birth in a nationally representative sample.
This was a retrospective cohort analysis using data from the 2013-2015 National Survey of Family Growth. The National Survey of Family Growth uses a stratified, multistage clustered sample to make nationally representative estimates for men and women aged 15 to 44 years in the household population of the United States. The analysis was limited to a cohort of birthing people who reported their last birth as unwanted and who were insured by either Medicaid or private insurance. The survey was analyzed with the application of inverse probability of treatment weights to balance those with Medicaid and those with private insurance in addition to the survey weight. The association between completion of postpartum sterilization and insurance type was evaluated using weighted logistic regression, adjusting for demographic and clinical characteristics.
In an adjusted and inverse probability of treatment weight balanced analysis of a weighted national sample representing 4,164,304 people (416 respondents), Medicaid-insured birthing people with history of unwanted births were found to have 56% lower odds of obtaining postpartum sterilization (odds ratio, 0.44; 95% confidence interval, 0.22-0.87; P=.019) than those with private insurance.
This study adds to mounting evidence that insurance type plays a significant role in the achievement of desired postpartum sterilization, with individuals with Medicaid less likely to undergo the procedure. The findings call for policy reforms around sterilization policy in the United States, emphasizing the need for uniform consent procedures that do not discriminate based on insurance status.
与其他任何保险机制不同,医疗补助计划对希望进行绝育的女性患者施加了同意要求,该要求必须在绝育前至少 30 天但不超过 180 天完成。如果没有这种同意,医疗补助计划人群就无法完成所需的绝育。关于这一要求的效果,缺乏大规模的全国性证据。
本研究旨在探索在全国有代表性的样本中,报告意外分娩后,保险状况对实现产后绝育的影响。
这是一项使用 2013-2015 年全国生育调查数据的回顾性队列分析。全国生育调查采用分层、多阶段聚类抽样,对美国 15 至 44 岁的家庭人口中的男性和女性进行全国代表性估计。分析仅限于一组报告上次分娩为意外分娩且由医疗补助或私人保险承保的分娩人群。除了调查权重外,还应用治疗反概率权重来平衡医疗补助和私人保险的人群。使用加权逻辑回归评估产后绝育完成情况与保险类型之间的关联,调整人口统计学和临床特征。
在一项针对代表 4164304 人的加权全国样本(416 名受访者)的调整和治疗反概率权重平衡分析中,发现有意外分娩史的医疗补助保险分娩者获得产后绝育的几率降低 56%(优势比,0.44;95%置信区间,0.22-0.87;P=.019)。
本研究增加了越来越多的证据表明,保险类型在实现所需的产后绝育方面起着重要作用,而拥有医疗补助的个体进行该手术的可能性较小。这些发现呼吁美国对绝育政策进行政策改革,强调需要制定统一的同意程序,不因保险状况而歧视。