Arias, M. P., Wang, E., Leitner, K., Sannah, T., Keegan, M., Delferro, J., Iluore, C., Arimoro, F., Streaty, T., & Hamm, R. F. (2022). The impact on postpartum care by telehealth: a retrospective cohort study. American journal of obstetrics & gynecology MFM, 4(3), 100611. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajogmf.2022.100611 Evidence Rating: Moderate Intervention Components (click on component to see a list of all articles that use that intervention): Telemedicine Systems (Hospital), Intervention Description: The availability of postpartum care through telehealth, either via video and audio or audio only, starting on March 16, 2020. Before this date, all postpartum visits at our institution were performed in-person. However, after this date, outpatient obstetrics clinics recommended telehealth postpartum visits as the primary modality for visits while also offering some limited in-person postpartum visits. Intervention Results: Subjects in the postimplementation group were at 90% increased odds of attending a postpartum visit compared with those in the preimplementation group, even when controlling for race, prenatal care provider, parity, gestational age at delivery, and insurance status. Patients in the postimplementation group were also more likely to be screened for postpartum depression (86.3% vs 65.1%; P<.001) Conclusion: Availability of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic is associated with increased postpartum visit attendance and postpartum depression screening. However, telehealth was also associated with a decrease in use of long-acting reversible contraception or permanent sterilization. Study Design: Retrospective cohort study Setting: Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Pennsylvania Population of Focus: Postpartum women enrolled in Medicaid Sample Size: 1,759 (780 in preimplementation group 799 in postimplementation group( Age Range: 25-34 Access Abstract
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