Larkin Suzanna, Bullington Brooke W, Berg Kristen A, White Kari, Boozer Margaret, Serna Tania, Miller Emily S, Bailit Jennifer L, Arora Kavita Shah
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Womens Health Issues. 2025 Mar-Apr;35(2):83-88. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2025.01.002. Epub 2025 Feb 17.
Created to protect patients from coercive sterilization, the federally mandated 30-day waiting period for patients with Medicaid desiring permanent contraception is a known barrier to permanent contraception fulfillment. Existing research does not explicitly explore how physicians interpret and operationalize the consent policy, how they counsel regarding the waiting period, or whether physicians believe the policy should be revised. The purpose of this paper is to better understand obstetrician-gynecologist (OB-GYN) feelings, thoughts, and counseling practices around the waiting period as key stakeholders in counseling and provision of permanent contraception care.
We interviewed 81 postpartum people with a documented desire for permanent contraception and 61 OB-GYNs who delivered their infants at four hospitals across the United States. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using rapid qualitative analysis and thematic content analysis.
Forty-seven physicians (70.2%) expressed negative feelings toward the Medicaid waiting period policy and 14 (20.9%) expressed neutral/mixed feelings. Physicians often viewed the Medicaid sterilization consent policy as inequitable and reported feeling that the waiting period hinders patient autonomy. Several physicians suggested that the waiting period needs revision. Physicians cited several barriers related to the implementation of the waiting period, including a lack of prenatal care or the conversation not being initiated. Physicians mentioned various approaches to counseling around the waiting period, either explicitly or inexplicitly explaining the policy. Last, physicians discussed differing interpretations around the waiting period policy.
Physicians in our sample largely do not favor the current Medicaid sterilization waiting period. However, physicians report varying approaches to clinical counseling as well as beliefs regarding policy revision. Revision to the policy should be informed by the lived experience and expertise of the various stakeholders, including patients, clinicians, and policymakers.
为保护患者免受强制绝育,联邦政府规定,希望实施永久避孕措施的医疗补助患者需等待30天,这是实现永久避孕的一个已知障碍。现有研究并未明确探讨医生如何解读和实施同意政策、他们如何就等待期提供咨询,或者医生是否认为该政策应修订。本文的目的是更好地了解妇产科医生作为永久避孕咨询和护理的关键利益相关者,对等待期的感受、想法和咨询做法。
我们采访了81名有记录表明希望实施永久避孕措施的产后患者以及61名在美国四家医院接生的妇产科医生。采访进行了录音、转录,并采用快速定性分析和主题内容分析进行分析。
47名医生(70.2%)对医疗补助等待期政策表达了负面看法,14名医生(20.9%)表达了中立/复杂的看法。医生们常常认为医疗补助绝育同意政策不公平,并表示认为等待期阻碍了患者的自主权。几位医生建议等待期需要修订。医生们列举了与等待期实施相关的几个障碍,包括缺乏产前护理或未开启相关谈话。医生们提到了围绕等待期进行咨询的各种方法,要么明确解释政策,要么含蓄解释。最后,医生们讨论了对等待期政策的不同解读。
我们样本中的医生大多不赞成当前的医疗补助绝育等待期。然而,医生们报告了不同的临床咨询方法以及对政策修订的看法。政策修订应参考包括患者、临床医生和政策制定者在内的各种利益相关者的实际经验和专业知识。