Low-volume obstetrics. Characteristics of family physicians' practices in Alberta. (57/862)

OBJECTIVE: To compare the obstetric practices of family physicians who attended fewer than 25 births per year (low-volume) with the practices of family physicians who attended more than 25 births per year (high-volume) and the practices of obstetricians. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using data from administrative databases. SETTING: Alberta. PARTICIPANTS: All physicians who provided intrapartum care between April 1, 1997, and March 31, 2000. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Type of delivery, size of hospitals where deliveries took place, characteristics of patients, and number of medical interventions. RESULTS: Of 1026 family physicians, 543 (53%) were low-volume providers of intrapartum care. In 1997-1998, low-volume family physicians (LVFPs) attended 24% of all vaginal and cesarean births attended by family physicians; by 1998-1999, that percentage had decreased to 9%; and by 1999-2000, to 5%. In contrast, the number of births attended by all family physicians remained relatively constant at 43% during the 3 years. In hospitals that had fewer than 50 deliveries a year, LVFPs attended almost half the births. Although LVFPs did fewer medical inductions, vacuum extractions, and epidural anesthetics and more forceps extractions, episiotomies, and cesarean sections than high-volume family physicians (HVFPs), the differences between their practices were much smaller than the differences between all family physicians' practices and the practices of obstetricians (who treat higher-risk mothers and newborns). CONCLUSION: The decrease in LVFPs' obstetric practices could make a pronounced difference at smaller hospitals where most low-volume practice occurs.  (+info)

In for the long haul. Which family physicians plan to continue delivering babies? (58/862)

OBJECTIVE: To compare characteristics of family physicians planning to discontinue or stay in intrapartum care. DESIGN: Self-administered questionnaire. SETTING: Department of Family Practice at Children's and Women's Health Centre of British Columbia. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-five family physicians who attended at least one birth at the Health Centre between April 1997 and August 1998. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Intention to leave or stay in family practice maternity care, physician characteristics and beliefs. RESULTS: Forty-five percent (43/95) of family physicians planned to leave maternity care within the next 5 years. Physicians planning to leave had more negative attitudes about the alternative birthing centre, doulas, and practising in free-standing settings without on-site obstetricians; were more likely to report missing personal events because they had put their maternity patients first; were less likely to make housecalls during women's labour; and were more likely to be paid through fee-for-service. CONCLUSION: Being paid by fee-for-service, having negative attitudes toward non-traditional maternity care, and conflict between maternity care and personal life were associated with intention to leave intrapartum care.  (+info)

The Perinatal Guidelines Evaluation Project HIV and Pregnancy Study: overview and cohort description. (59/862)

OBJECTIVE: The HIV and Pregnancy Study of the Perinatal Guidelines Evaluation Project is a prospective, longitudinal, multisite study established to: (a) assess the implementation of Public Health Service guidelines regarding the prevention of perinatal HIV transmission and (b) evaluate the psychosocial consequences of HIV infection among pregnant women. A distinctive aspect of the study is the use of an HIV-negative comparison group. This article describes the methodology of the study and baseline characteristics of the study sample. Methods and Results. HIV-infected (n = 336) and uninfected (n = 298) pregnant women were enrolled from four geographic areas: Connecticut, North Carolina, Brooklyn, NY, and Miami, FL. The study included three structured face-to-face interviews from late pregnancy to six months postpartum for HIV-infected and uninfected women. Additional self-reports of medication adherence were collected for the HIV-infected participants, and the medical records of infected mothers and their infants were reviewed. Electronic monitoring of medication adherence was conducted for a subset of the infected women. The groups were successfully matched on self-reported characteristics, including HIV-risk behaviors. More than half of the uninfected women reported a high-risk sexual partner. Baseline comparisons indicated that both the HIV-infected and uninfected women had high levels of depressive symptoms, stress, and recent negative life events. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides a unique description of the psychosocial and behavioral characteristics of a population of low-income women. The results of this study suggest that HIV infection is one of many stressors faced by the women in this study.  (+info)

Advancing newborn health and survival in developing countries: a conceptual framework. (60/862)

Four million newborns die every year at home, often without skilled care at delivery or any other contact with the formal health system. Improved household practices and use of services, often in the community, should improve survival. We developed a conceptual framework for household and community newborn and maternal care that acknowledges the inseparability of the mother and neonate, yet stresses elements relating to the newborn, heretofore underemphasized in safe motherhood and child-survival programs. The framework identifies five paths that, if implemented well, would generally improve newborn outcomes: (1) use of routine maternal and newborn care and good-quality services; (2) response to maternal danger signs; (3) response to the nonbreathing newborn; (4) care for the low birth weight baby; and (5) response to newborn danger signs, particularly those of infection. This model, balancing preventive (19 routine behaviors) and curative care (14 special behaviors), is rooted in the community, bridges safe motherhood and child survival, and provides a framework for newborn health research, programmatic, and advocacy agendas for developing countries.  (+info)

Rating maternal and neonatal health services in developing countries. (61/862)

OBJECTIVE: To assess maternal and neonatal health services in 49 developing countries. METHODS: The services were rated on a scale of 0 to 100 by 10 - 25 experts in each country. The ratings covered emergency and routine services, including family planning, at health centres and district hospitals, access to these services for both rural and urban women, the likelihood that women would receive particular forms of antenatal and delivery care, and supporting elements of programmes such as policy, resources, monitoring, health promotion and training. FINDINGS: The average rating was only 56, but countries varied widely, especially in access to services in rural areas. Comparatively good ratings were reported for immunization services, aspects of antenatal care and counselling on breast feeding. Ratings were particularly weak for emergency obstetric care in rural areas, safe abortion and HIV counselling. CONCLUSION: Maternal health programme effort in developing countries is seriously deficient, particularly in rural areas. Rural women are disadvantaged in many respects, but especially regarding the treatment of emergency obstetric conditions. Both rural and urban women receive inadequate HIV counselling and testing and have quite limited access to safe abortion. Improving services requires moving beyond policy reform to strengthening implementation of services and to better staff training and health promotion. Increased financing is only part of the solution.  (+info)

The course of pregnancy and delivery and the use of maternal healthcare services after standard IVF in Northern Finland 1990-1995. (62/862)

BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to evaluate the course of pregnancy and delivery and the use of maternal healthcare after IVF. METHODS: This population-based cohort study included all women who had undergone IVF treatment in Northern Finland leading to delivery in 1990-1995 (n = 225) and control pregnancies derived from the Finnish Medical Birth Register (n = 671) matched for sex of the child, year of birth, area, maternal age, parity, social class and fetal plurality. The analyses were stratified by plurality. Outcome measures were pregnancy complications, mode of delivery, gestational length and the level of use of antenatal care. RESULTS: The results showed an increased risk for vaginal bleeding throughout pregnancy [relative risk (RR) 4.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.5-6.7 for singletons; RR 6.9, 95% CI 2.5-19.2 for twins], threatened preterm birth (RR 1.8, 95% CI 1.1-2.9, singletons) and intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (RR 3.8, 95% CI 1.0-15.0, singletons) in IVF pregnancies, as well as an increase in the use of specialized antenatal care. CONCLUSIONS: IVF pregnancies following standard, fresh ova IVF treatments are at greater risk of obstetric problems than spontaneously conceived pregnancies, and hence IVF mothers use more specialized antenatal care than others. The pregnancy complications after IVF are likely to be due to maternal characteristics regarding infertility and to a high incidence of multiple pregnancies.  (+info)

Are we regionalized enough? Early-neonatal deaths in low-risk births by the size of delivery units in Hesse, Germany 1990-1999. (63/862)

BACKGROUND: While agreement exists about the benefits of regionalization for high-risk births, little evidence exists regarding regionalization of low-risk births. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of regionalization on neonatal survival focussed on low-risk births. METHODS: Data from the perinatal birth register of Hesse, 1990-1999 were used comprising detailed information about 582,655 births covering more than 95% of all births in Hesse. Outcome events were death during labour or within the first 7 days of life (early-neonatal death). Mortality rates and corresponding 95% CI were calculated according to hospital volume measured by births per year and birthweight categories. RESULTS: Birthweight-specific mortality rates were lowest in large delivery units and highest in smaller delivery units. This gradient was especially pronounced within low-risk births and was also confirmed in several logistic regression models adjusting for additional risk factors. A more than threefold mortality risk was observed in hospitals with <500 births/year compared with hospitals with >1,500 births/year (odds ratio = 3.48; 95% CI: 2.64-4.58). Further trend analyses indicated that prenatal prevention programmes and the increasing usage of modern prenatal diagnostic procedures have not reduced this gradient in recent years. CONCLUSIONS: This analysis presents an urgent public policy issue of whether such elevated risk in smaller delivery units is acceptable or if further consolidation of birthing units should be considered to reduce early-neonatal mortality.  (+info)

Economic costs of post-natal depression in a high-risk British cohort. (64/862)

BACKGROUND: Post-natal depression is a common condition that can result in distress for the mother and deleterious effects on the development of the infant. AIMS: To estimate the economic costs of post-natal depression in a geographically defined cohort of women at high risk of developing the condition. METHOD: Unit costs were applied to estimates of health and social care resource use made by 206 women recruited from antenatal clinics and their infants. Net costs per mother-infant dyad over the first 18 months post-partum were estimated. RESULTS: Mean mother-infant dyad costs were estimated at pound 2419.00 for women with post-natal depression and pound 2026.90 for women without post-natal depression, a mean cost difference of pound 392.10 (P=0.17). The mean cost differences between women with and without post-natal depression reached statistical significance for community care services (P=0.01), but not for other categories of service. Economic costs were higher for women with extended experiences of the condition. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study should be used to facilitate the effective planning of services by different agencies.  (+info)