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Postpartum Care in the Time of COVID-19: The Use of Telemedicine for Postpartum Care

Ayoka M. Adams, Haotian Wu, Faye R. Zhang, Julia Wajsberg, Talitha Bruney

2022Telemedicine Journal and e-Health24 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: Telemedicine was implemented at our institution in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Data do not currently exist about the use of telemedicine in providing comprehensive postpartum care. Objective: This project aimed to evaluate the impact of telemedicine on postpartum care at an urban Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC). Study Design: This was a retrospective cohort study of patients who delivered at an urban hospital in New York between September and November 2019 (pre-COVID), February through April 2020 (peak-COVID) and June through August 2020 (ongoing-COVID). The primary outcome was postpartum visit attendance. Secondary outcomes included contraception use, breastfeeding, depression screening, hospital readmission, and emergency department visit rates. Log-binomial regression models were used to estimate relative risk. Results: Telemedicine accounted for 1% of postpartum visits in the pre-COVID cohort, 60% in the peak-COVID cohort, and 48% in the ongoing-COVID cohort. Postpartum visit attendance rates were 52% in the pre-COVID cohort, 43% in the peak-COVID cohort, and 56% in the ongoing-COVID cohort ( p > 0.05). There was a nonsignificant increase in postpartum visit show rate for telemedicine visits compared to in-person visits in the peak-COVID cohort (76% vs. 65%; relative risk [RR] 1.17 [0.87–1.57]) and ongoing-COVID cohort (85% vs. 74%; RR 1.16 [0.90–1.50]). Patients were significantly less likely to have a Patient Health Questionnaire-2 Depression screen in the peak-COVID and ongoing-COVID cohorts (22% and 33%) than in the pre-COVID cohort (74%) ( p < 0.01). There were no significant differences in hospital readmissions, contraceptive use or breastfeeding rates across cohorts ( p > 0.05). Conclusions: At our urban FQHC, telemedicine was comparable to in-person postpartum care in terms of attendance rates during the COVID-19 pandemic, without an increase in rates of hospital visits or readmissions. However, postpartum depression screening needs to be better integrated into the telemedicine visit type.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCohortTelemedicineCohort studyRetrospective cohort studyAttendancePostpartum periodTelehealthEmergency medicinePediatricsHealth carePregnancyInternal medicineGeneticsEconomicsEconomic growthBiologyCOVID-19 Impact on ReproductionGlobal Maternal and Child HealthMaternal and fetal healthcare
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