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Emergency Care Utilization Among Pregnant Medicaid Recipients in North Carolina: An Analysis Using Linked Claims and Birth Records

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Abstract

Objectives To estimate the rate of pregnancy-associated emergency care visits and identify maternal and pregnancy characteristics associated with high utilization of emergency care among pregnant Medicaid recipients in North Carolina. Methods A retrospective cohort study using linked Medicaid hospital claims and birth records of 107,207 pregnant Medicaid recipients who delivered a live-born infant in North Carolina between January 1, 2008 and December 31, 2009. Rates were estimated per 1000 member months of Medicaid coverage. High utilization was defined as ≥ 4 visits. Emergency care visits included encounters in the emergency department or obstetric triage unit during pregnancy that did not result in hospital admission. Results During the study period, 57.5% of pregnant Medicaid recipients sought emergency care at least once during pregnancy. There were 171,909 emergency care visits with an overall rate of 202.3 visits per 1000 member months. Among the subset of pregnant women with Medicaid coverage for the majority of their pregnancy (n = 75,157), 18.1% were high utilizers. High emergency care utilization was associated with young age, black race, lower education, tobacco use, late preterm delivery, multifetal gestation, and having ≥ 1 comorbidity. Threatened labor and abdominal pain were the leading indications for visits. Conclusion Utilization of hospital-based emergency care services was common in this cohort of pregnant Medicaid recipients. Additional research is needed to assess the drivers for accessing care through the emergency department, and to examine differences in pregnancy outcomes and health care costs between high and low utilizers.

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Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge Dana Smith from Kaiser Permanente for her assistance with conceptualizing the study and her contributions to earlier iterations of this manuscript; Kate Berrien from the Community Care of North Carolina for her assistance with conceptualizing the study; and Carlos Jackson from the Community Care of North Carolina for his help with data acquisition. None of these individuals received funding for this research.

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Correspondence to Catherine J. Vladutiu.

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Appendices

Appendix 1

See Table 4.

Table 4 Diagnosis categories according to the single-level clinical classifications software and additional diagnosis codes

Appendix 2

See Table 5.

Table 5 Characteristics of pregnant medicaid recipients, by high vs. low utilization of emergency care, North Carolina (n = 75,157 women), 2007–2009

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Vladutiu, C.J., Stringer, E.M., Kandasamy, V. et al. Emergency Care Utilization Among Pregnant Medicaid Recipients in North Carolina: An Analysis Using Linked Claims and Birth Records. Matern Child Health J 23, 265–276 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-018-2651-6

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