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Improving Birth Outcomes And Lowering Costs For Women On Medicaid: Impacts Of ‘Strong Start For Mothers And Newborns’

Lisa Dubay, Ian Hill, Bowen Garrett, Fredric Blavin, Emily M. Johnston, Embry Howell, Justin Morgan, Brigette Courtot, Sarah Benatar, Caitlin Cross‐Barnet

2020Health Affairs57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The federal Strong Start for Mothers and Newborns initiative supported alternative approaches to prenatal care, enhancing service delivery through the use of birth centers, group prenatal care, and maternity care homes. Using propensity score reweighting to control for medical and social risks, we evaluated the impacts of Strong Start's models on birth outcomes and costs by comparing the experiences of Strong Start enrollees to those of Medicaid-covered women who received typical prenatal care. We found that women who received prenatal care in birth centers had lower rates of preterm and low-birthweight infants, lower rates of cesarean section, and higher rates of vaginal birth after cesarean than did the women in the comparison groups. Improved outcomes were achieved at lower costs. There were few improvements in outcomes for participants who received group prenatal care, although their costs were lower in the prenatal period, and no improvements in outcomes for participants in maternity care homes.

Topics & Concepts

MedicaidMedicinePrenatal carePregnancyObstetricsFamily medicineEnvironmental healthHealth carePopulationBiologyEconomic growthEconomicsGeneticsMaternal and Perinatal Health InterventionsGlobal Maternal and Child HealthHealthcare Policy and Management
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