Association of prenatal stress with distance to delivery for pregnant women in Western North Carolina

Rural areas throughout the US continue to see closures of maternity wards and decreasing access to prenatal and intrapartum care. Studies examining closure's impacts have demonstrated both positive and negative effects on maternal and neonatal outcomes of mortality and morbidity. Our study aims...

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Veröffentlicht in:Midwifery 2023-03, Vol.118, p.103573-103573, Article 103573
Hauptverfasser: Woodward, Rivers, Mazure, Emily S., Belden, Charles M., Denslow, Sheri, Fromewick, Jill, Dixon, Suzanne, Gist, William, Sullivan, Margaret H.
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container_title Midwifery
container_volume 118
creator Woodward, Rivers
Mazure, Emily S.
Belden, Charles M.
Denslow, Sheri
Fromewick, Jill
Dixon, Suzanne
Gist, William
Sullivan, Margaret H.
description Rural areas throughout the US continue to see closures of maternity wards and decreasing access to prenatal and intrapartum care. Studies examining closure's impacts have demonstrated both positive and negative effects on maternal and neonatal outcomes of mortality and morbidity. Our study aims to build on growing evidence from Canada and Scandinavia that suggests increased travel time to give birth is associated with increased emotional and financial stress for rural pregnant women. Pregnant patients at 7 clinic sites in western North Carolina were invited to complete the Rural Pregnancy Experience Scale (RPES) while waiting for their prenatal appointments. Results were analyzed using adjusted linear regressions to examine the correlation between RPES scores and self-reported distance to anticipated birth location as well as RPES scores with recent local labor and delivery closure. A total of 174 participants completed the survey and met inclusion criteria. For every 10 min increase in travel distance to the patient's anticipated place of delivery, RPES scores increased by an average of 0.72 points. Participants who reported a recent labor and delivery unit closure near them saw average increases of 2.52 on the RPES. Our findings are consistent with the growing body of literature internationally that demonstrates the distance required to travel to delivery location is associated with increased stress among rural pregnant women.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.midw.2022.103573
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Access to care
Canada
Female
Health disparities
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Labor, Obstetric
Mental health
North Carolina
Parturition
Pregnancy
Pregnant Women - psychology
Prenatal Care
Qualitative research
title Association of prenatal stress with distance to delivery for pregnant women in Western North Carolina
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