Program

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In-person registration included the full virtual experience, and virtual-only attendees will be able to tune into live in-person sessions and/or watch captured in-person sessions on-demand in addition to having a variety of virtual-only sessions to attend.

Insurance Coverage and Pregnancy-Related Mortality and Miscarriage in Hospital Admissions Among Pregnant Women

Speaker(s)

Tran P, Shaya FT
University of Maryland Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, USA

Presentation Documents

OBJECTIVE: Evidence is mounting on suboptimal maternal health, pointing to a relation with access to care, possibly mediated by insurance coverage status. In this study, we assessed the association between insurance coverage and pregnancy-related outcomes in hospital admissions among pregnant women over the course of three years.

METHODS: This retrospective cohort study used discharge medical record abstract and billing data in Maryland from 2017-2019. The diagnosis was identified through the International Classification of Diseases tenth revision-Clinical Modification diagnostic codes. We built logistic regression models to identify factors associated with hospital admissions with adverse pregnancy-related outcomes (either mortality or miscarriage), considering different types of primary insurance coverage (Medicare, Medicaid, commercial insurance, or self-pay, donor, and other), and controlling for age, residency status, race, nature of hospital admissions, major hospital service assigned, and comorbidity (high-risk pregnancy, hypertension, and diabetes).

RESULTS: Between 2017 and 2019, out of 207,016 hospital admissions among pregnant women ages 14-45 in Maryland, 587 resulted in maternal mortality or miscarriage (28 per 10,000 admissions). Half of the admissions among pregnant women were covered by Medicaid, and about 44% by commercial insurance. Pregnant women with Medicare coverage (66 per 10,000 admissions) or without health insurance (53 per 10,000 admissions) were more likely than pregnant women with commercial insurance (22 per 10,000 admissions) to have admissions with adverse pregnancy-related outcomes. After controlling for demographic and clinical covariates, admissions for pregnant women without insurance coverage were more likely to result in adverse pregnancy-related outcomes than admissions for women with commercial insurance (OR=1.94, 95%CI: 1.40 - 2.67, p<0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis highlights the association between type of insurance coverage, and hospital admissions with pregnancy-related outcomes, namely maternal mortality or miscarriage, possibly suggesting the need for stepped up approaches for prenatal care, customized to populations by type of insurance.

Code

EPH24

Topic

Epidemiology & Public Health, Health Policy & Regulatory

Topic Subcategory

Insurance Systems & National Health Care, Public Health

Disease

Reproductive and Sexual Health