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Perinatal health care access, childbirth concerns, and birthing decision-making among pregnant people in California during COVID-19

机译:在Covid-19期间加利福尼亚州孕人的围产期医疗保健,分娩和分娩决策

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During public health emergencies, including the COVID-19 pandemic, access to adequate healthcare is crucial for providing for the health and wellbeing of families. Pregnant and postpartum people are a particularly vulnerable subgroup to consider when studying healthcare access. Not only are perinatal people likely at higher risk for illness, mortality, and morbidity from COVID-19 infection, they are also at higher risk for negative outcomes due to delayed or inadequate access to routine care. We surveyed 820 pregnant people in California over two waves of the COVID-19 pandemic: (1) a ‘non-surge’ wave (June 2020, n?=?433), and (2) during a ‘surge’ in cases (December 2020, n?=?387) to describe current access to perinatal healthcare, as well as concerns and decision-making regarding childbirth, over time. We also examined whether existing structural vulnerabilities – including acute financial insecurity and racial/ethnic minoritization – are associated with access, concerns, and decision-making over these two waves. Pregnant Californians generally enjoyed more access to, and fewer concerns about, perinatal healthcare during the winter of 2020–2021, despite surging COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, as compared to those surveyed during the COVID-19 ‘lull’ in the summer of 2020. However, across ‘surge’ and ‘non-surge’ pandemic circumstances, marginalized pregnant people continued to fare worse – especially those facing acute financial difficulty, and racially minoritized individuals identifying as Black or Indigenous. It is important for clinicians, researchers, and policymakers to understand whether and how shifting community transmission and infection rates may impact access to perinatal healthcare. Targeting minoritized and financially insecure communities for increased upstream perinatal healthcare supports are promising avenues to blunt the negative impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on pregnant people in California.
机译:在公共卫生期间,包括Covid-19大流行,获得足够的医疗保健至关重要,为家庭提供健康和福祉至关重要。怀孕和产后人是一个特别脆弱的亚组,在学习医疗保健时会考虑。围产期不仅有可能患有Covid-19感染的疾病,死亡率和发病率较高的人,它们也是由于延迟或不足常规护理而导致的负面结果的风险更高。我们在Covid-19大流行的两个波浪中调查了820个孕妇:(1)一个“非浪涌”波(6月20日,N?=?433),(2)在“浪涌”中( 2020年12月,N?=?387)描述当前对围产期医疗保健的访问,以及关于分娩的担忧和决策。我们还检查了现有的结构漏洞 - 包括急性金融不安全和种族/少数级别 - 与这两个波浪的访问,疑虑和决策相关。虽然在2020年夏天,虽然在2020年夏天,但仍然在2020-2021年冬季,围产期医疗保健,围产期医疗保健,围产期医疗保健的持续困难和持续较少的疑虑。然而,跨越“飙升”和“非激增”的大流行情况,边缘化的孕人们仍然越来越糟糕 - 特别是那些面临急性财务困难的人,以及鉴定为黑色或土着的种族较小的人。对于临床医生,研究人员和政策制定者来说,了解是否以及转移群落传播和感染率可能会影响到围产期医疗保健的方法。针对上游围产期医疗保健支持增加的小型和经济不安全的社区是有希望的途径,为加州孕妇的Covid-19大流行病的负面影响展示。

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