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Factors associated with inadequate prenatal care during the second pregnancies among African-American women
McDermott, J. M., Drews, C., Adams, M., Berg, C., Hill, H. A., & McCarthy, B. J. (1996). Factors associated with inadequate prenatal care during the second pregnancies among African-American women. Journal of Nurse-Midwifery, 41(5), 368-376. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0091-2182(96)00058-4
A longitudinally linked data set for Georgia was used to identify characteristics, including previous prenatal care use and complications at the first birth, associated with prenatal care use in the second pregnancy among 8,224 African‐American women. More than 70% of the women who were <25 years of age at their first birth (younger women) and almost 40% of women who were ≥25 years at their first birth received inadequate care with at least one of their first two births. Women who received inadequate care in their first pregnancy were more likely to receive inadequate care in their second pregnancy than women who received adequate care in their first pregnancy. Younger women with a history of a stillbirth, neonatal death, or vacuum extraction were less likely to receive inadequate care in their subsequent pregnancy. Although this study was not able to evaluate the content of prenatal care, it suggested that many African‐American women may not receive sufficient care to prevent adverse pregnancy outcomes. Women who receive inadequate care in their first pregnancy must be targeted for interventions that help them overcome economic, situational, or attitudinal barriers to receiving adequate care in their next pregnancy.