Primary Care After Pregnancy Survey: Patient Preferences, Health Concerns, and Anticipated Barriers
- PMID: 38878260
- DOI: 10.1007/s10995-024-03958-8
Primary Care After Pregnancy Survey: Patient Preferences, Health Concerns, and Anticipated Barriers
Abstract
Despite recommendations for ongoing care after pregnancy, many individuals do not see a primary care clinician within the first postpartum year, missing a critical window to engage reproductive-age individuals in primary care. We administered an anonymous, cross-sectional, trilingual survey at a large urban safety-net hospital to assess postpartum individuals' preferences, health concerns, and anticipated barriers to primary care during the year after pregnancy. While 90% of respondents preferred a visit within one year, most individuals - including those with complicated pregnancies - did not recall a primary care recommendation from their pregnancy care team. Respondents reported a variety of primary care-amenable health concerns, and many social and logistical barriers to care. Preference for virtual care increased if self-monitoring tools were hypothetically available, indicating virtual visits may improve primary care access.
Keywords: Postpartum; Pregnancy complications; Primary care; Survey.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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