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Article
The Cost of Nurse-Midwifery Care: Use of Interventions, Resources, and Associated Costs in the Hospital Setting.
Women's health issues : official publication of the Jacobs Institute of Women's Health
  • Molly R Altman
  • Sean M Murphy
  • Cynthia E Fitzgerald, Providence Health Care, Spokane, Washington.
  • H Frank Andersen, Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, Everett, Washington.
  • Kenn B Daratha
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2017
Keywords
  • Adult,
  • Cesarean Section,
  • Electronic Health Records,
  • Female,
  • Health Care Costs,
  • Hospitals,
  • Humans,
  • Labor, Induced,
  • Length of Stay,
  • Live Birth,
  • Maternal Health Services,
  • Midwifery,
  • Nurse Midwives,
  • Obstetrics,
  • Physicians,
  • Pregnancy,
  • Quality of Health Care,
  • Workforce,
  • Young Adult
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Obstetrical care often involves multiple expensive, and often elective, interventions that may increase costs to patients, payers, and the health care system with little effect on patient outcomes. The objectives of this study were to examine the following hospital related outcomes: 1) use of labor and birth interventions, 2) inpatient duration of stay, and 3) total direct health care costs for patients attended by a certified nurse-midwife (CNM) compared with those attended by an obstetrician-gynecologist (OB-GYN), within an environment of safe and high-quality care.

MATERIAL AND METHODS: Electronic health records for 1,441 medically low-risk women who gave birth at a hospital located in the U.S. Pacific Northwest between January and September 2013 were sampled. Multilevel regression and generalized linear models were used for analysis.

RESULTS: Reduced use of selected labor and birth interventions (cesarean delivery, vacuum-assisted delivery, epidural anesthesia, labor induction, and cervical ripening), reduced maternal duration of stay, and reduced overall costs associated with CNM-led care relative to OB-GYN-led care were observed for medically low-risk women in a hospital setting. Maternal and neonatal outcomes were comparable across groups.

CONCLUSIONS: This study supports consideration of increased use of CNMs as providers for the care of women at low risk for complications to decrease costs for the health care system. The use of CNMs to the fullest extent within state-regulated scopes of practice could result in more efficient use of hospital resources.

Clinical Institute
Women & Children
Specialty
Nursing
Specialty
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Citation Information
Molly R Altman, Sean M Murphy, Cynthia E Fitzgerald, H Frank Andersen, et al.. "The Cost of Nurse-Midwifery Care: Use of Interventions, Resources, and Associated Costs in the Hospital Setting." Women's health issues : official publication of the Jacobs Institute of Women's Health (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kenn-daratha/43/