4.7 Article

American Indians travel great distances for obstetrical care: Examining rural and racial disparities

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 325, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115897

Keywords

Obstetrics; gynecology; Health care disparities; Rural health; Racial; ethnic differences in health and health care; Access; demand; utilization of services; Birthing people; American Indians; Montana

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Rural, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) people, especially those living on reservations, are more likely to bypass their local obstetric unit and travel longer distances to give birth, compared to white people. Factors such as health risks, insurance coverage, and rural location influence the likelihood of bypassing. However, despite the potential benefits of bypassing in connecting rural birthing people to appropriate care, healthcare access disparities based on rural and racial factors continue to persist.
Rural, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) people, a population at elevated risk for complex pregnancies, have limited access to risk-appropriate obstetric care. Obstetrical bypassing, seeking care at a non-local obstetric unit, is an important feature of perinatal regionalization that can alleviate some challenges faced by this rural population, at the cost of increased travel to give birth. Data from five years (2014-2018) of birth certificates from Montana, along with the 2018 annual survey of the American Hospital Association (AHA) were used in logistic regression models to identify predictors of bypassing, with ordinary least squares regression models used to predict factors associated with the distance (in miles) birthing people drove beyond their local obstetric unit to give birth. Logit analyses focused on hospital-based births to Montana residents delivered during this time period (n = 54,146 births). Distance analyses focused on births to individuals who bypassed their local obstetric unit to deliver (n = 5,991 births). Individual-level predictors included maternal sociodemographic characteristics, location, perinatal health characteristics, and health care utilization. Facility-related measures included level of obstetric care of the closest and delivery hospitals, and distance to the closest hospital-based obstetric unit. Findings suggest that birthing people living in rural areas and on American Indian reservations were more likely to bypass to give birth, with bypassing likelihood depending on health risk, insurance, and rurality. AI/AN and reservation-dwelling birthing people traveled significantly farther when bypassing. Findings highlight that dis-tance traveled was even farther for AI/AN people facing pregnancy health risks (23.8 miles farther than White people with pregnancy risks) or when delivering at facilities offering complex care (14-44 miles farther than White people). While bypassing may connect rural birthing people to more risk-appropriate care, rural and racial inequities in access persist, with rural, reservation-dwelling AI/AN birthing people experiencing greater likeli-hood of bypassing and traveling greater distances when bypassing.

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