4.6 Editorial Material

Preventing Low Birthweight: 25 years, prenatal risk, and the failure to reinvent prenatal care

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY
Volume 206, Issue 5, Pages 398-403

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajog.2011.06.082

Keywords

health care utilization; low birthweight; prenatal care; risk assessment

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In 2010, Preventing Low Birthweight celebrated it 25th anniversary. The report, one of the most influential policy statements ever issued regarding obstetric health care delivery, linked prenatal care to a reduction in low birthweight (LBW). Medicaid coverage for prenatal care services was subsequently expanded and resulted in increased prenatal care utilization. However, the rate of LBW failed to decrease. This well-intentioned expansion of prenatal care services did not change the structure of prenatal care. A single, standardized prenatal care model, largely ineffective in the prevention of LBW, was expanded to a heterogeneous group of patients with a variety of medical and psychosocial risk factors. Reinventing prenatal care as a flexible model, with content, frequency, and timing tailored to maternal and fetal risk, may improve adverse birth outcomes. Risk-appropriate prenatal care may improve the effectiveness of prenatal care for high-risk patients and the efficiency of prenatal care delivery for low-risk patients.

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