Journal
JOURNAL OF PERINATAL & NEONATAL NURSING
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 27-35Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/JPN.0000000000000705
Keywords
digital divide; perinatal care; portable technology; telehealth; unstably housed
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Pregnant people in rural areas face increased risk of poor perinatal outcomes due to the need for long-distance travel to perinatal care providers. Telehealth care has been used successfully to increase access to perinatal care, but this requires access to broadband internet and secure connections, posing challenges for unstably housed pregnant individuals who may lack access to technology. The Midwifery Integrated Home Visitation Program aims to address this digital divide by bringing perinatal care services to the desired location of care for unstably housed individuals, using telehealth and portable technology to meet their medical and nonmedical needs, potentially reducing emergency department visits and preventing poor perinatal outcomes.
Pregnant people living in rural areas are at an increased risk of experiencing poor perinatal outcomes due, in part, to the need to travel long distances to see a perinatal care provider. Telehealth care has been used successfully to increase access to perinatal care but requires patients to have access to broadband Internet access and devices capable of establishing secure connections so they can participate in their care. This places an additional burden on unstably housed pregnant persons who may not have access to the required technology. The Midwifery Integrated Home Visitation Program was developed to bridge this digital divide by bringing perinatal care services to the unstably housed at their desired location of care. The included case studies outline how telehealth and portable technology were used to address the medical and nonmedical needs of unstably housed pregnant people. They also outline how bridging the digital divide by combining in-person perinatal care with mobile technology, portable technology, and telehealth care has the potential to decrease unnecessary emergency department care and ambulance use while facilitating the receipt of appropriate care and thus potentially preventing poor perinatal outcomes.
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