4.6 Article

Disparities in Preterm Infant Emergency Room Utilization and Rehospitalization by Maternal Immigrant Status

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 220, Issue -, Pages 27-33

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2020.01.052

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Funding

  1. Centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation [CMS 1C1CMS330993]

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Objective To evaluate the effects of immigrant mother status and risk factors on the rates of emergency room (ER) visits and rehospitalizations of preterm infants within 90 days after discharge. Study design This was a retrospective cohort study of 732 mothers of 866 preterm infants (<37 weeks of gestational age) cared for in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) for >5 days. Medical and demographic data and number of ER visits and rehospitalizations were collected. The primary outcomes were the numbers of ER visits and rehospitalizations. Analysis included bivariate comparisons of immigrant and native mother-infant dyads. Regression models were run to estimate the effects of immigrant mother status and risk factors. Results Compared with native mothers, immigrant mothers (176 of 732; 24%) were more likely to be older, to be gravida >1, to be nonwhite, to have a non-English primary language, to have less than a high school education, and to have Medicaid insurance but less likely to have child protective services, substance abuse, and a mental health disorder. Infants of immigrant mothers (203 of 866; 23%) had higher rates of ER visits and more days of hospitalization compared with infants of native mothers. Among immigrant mothers only, >5 years living in the US, non-English primary language, and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) were predictive of ER visits, whereas Medicaid and BPD were predictive of rehospitalization. For the total cohort, after an interaction between Medicaid and immigrant status was added to the model, immigrant status became nonsignificant and immigrant mothers with Medicaid emerged as a strong predictor of hospitalization and a borderline predictor for ER visits. Conclusions Among immigrant mothers, non-English primary language, >5 years living in the US, and BPD increased the odds of an ER visit. For the total cohort, however, the interaction of immigrant mother with Medicaid as a marker of poverty provided a significant modifying effect on increased rehospitalization and ER use.

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