Dual Barriers: Examining Digital Access and Travel Burdens to Hospital Maternity Care Access in the United States, 2020

Author:

HUNG PEIYIN123ORCID,GRANGER MARION1,BOGHOSSIAN NANSI1,YU JIANI4,HARRISON SAYWARD35,LIU JIHONG13,CAMPBELL BERRY A.6,CAI BO1,LIANG CHEN13,LI XIAOMING13

Affiliation:

1. University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health

2. University of South Carolina Rural and Minority Health Research Center

3. South Carolina SmartState Center for Health Care Quality University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health

4. Division of Health Policy and Economics of the Department of Population Health Sciences Weill Cornell Medical College

5. Department of Psychology University of South Carolina College of Arts and Sciences

6. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology University of South Carolina School of Medicine

Abstract

Policy Points The White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis report released in June 2022 highlighted the need to enhance equitable access to maternity care. Nationwide hospital maternity unit closures have worsened the maternal health crisis in underserved communities, leaving many birthing people with few options and with long travel times to reach essential care. Ensuring equitable access to maternity care requires addressing travel burdens to care and inadequate digital access. Our findings reveal socioeconomically disadvantaged communities in the United States face dual barriers to maternity care access, as communities located farthest away from care facilities had the least digital access.ContextWith the increases in nationwide hospital maternity unit closures, there is a greater need for telehealth services for the supervision, evaluation, and management of prenatal and postpartum care. However, challenges in digital access persist. We examined associations between driving time to hospital maternity units and digital access to understand whether augmenting digital access and telehealth services might help mitigate travel burdens to maternity care.MethodsThis cross‐sectional study used 2020 American Hospital Association Annual Survey data for hospital maternity unit locations and 2020 American Community Survey five‐year ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA)–level estimates of household digital access to telecommunication technology and broadband. We calculated driving times of the fastest route from population‐weighted ZCTA centroids to the nearest hospital maternity unit. Rural‐urban stratified generalized median regression models were conducted to examine differences in ZCTA‐level proportions of household lacking digital access equipment (any digital device, smartphones, tablet), and lacking broadband subscriptions by spatial accessibility to maternity units.FindingsIn 2020, 2,905 (16.6%) urban and 3,394 (39.5%) rural ZCTAs in the United States were located >30 minutes from the nearest hospital maternity units. Regardless of rurality, these communities farther away from a maternity unit had disproportionally lower broadband and device accessibility. Although urban communities have greater digital access to technology and broadband subscriptions compared to rural communities, disparities in the percentage of households with access to digital devices were more pronounced within urban areas, particularly between those with and without close proximity to a hospital maternity unit. Communities where nearest hospital maternity units were >30 minutes away had higher poverty and uninsurance rates than those with <15‐minute access.ConclusionsSocioeconomically disadvantaged communities face significant barriers to maternity care access, both with substantial travel burdens and inadequate digital access. To optimize maternity care access, ongoing efforts (e.g., Affordable Connectivity Program introduced in the 2021 Infrastructure Act), should bridge the gaps in digital access and target communities with substantial travel burdens to care and limited digital access.

Funder

Office of the Vice President for Research, University of South Carolina

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference55 articles.

1. The White House.White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis. Published June2022. Accessed March 8 2023.https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp‐content/uploads/2022/06/Maternal‐Health‐Blueprint.pdf

2. HungP KozhimannilKB CaseyM Henning‐SmithC.State Variability in Access to Hospital‐Based Obstetric Services in Rural U.S. Counties.University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center. Published April 14 2017. Accessed March 8 2023.https://rhrc.umn.edu/publication/state‐variability‐in‐access‐to‐hospital‐based‐obstetric‐services‐in‐rural‐u‐s‐counties/

3. Association Between Loss of Hospital-Based Obstetric Services and Birth Outcomes in Rural Counties in the United States

4. Access To Obstetric Services In Rural Counties Still Declining, With 9 Percent Losing Services, 2004–14

5. Changes in Hospital-Based Obstetric Services in Rural US Counties, 2014-2018

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