Med
Care 1998 May;36(5):679-94.
Health care characteristics associated with women's satisfaction with prenatal
care.
Handler A, Rosenberg D, Raube K, Kelley MA.
Maternal and Child Health Training Program of the University of Illinois
School of Public Health Community Health Sciences Division, Chicago 60612,
USA.
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to explore
the relation between prenatal care characteristics and satisfaction among
Medicaid recipients.
METHODS: African-American (n = 75) and Mexican-American
(n = 26) nonadolescent primiparous pregnant women who had at least three
prenatal care visits participated in a 25-minute telephone survey that
asked them about satisfaction with prenatal care (art of care, technical
quality, physical environment, access, availability and efficacy); prenatal
care characteristics (practitioner attributes, service availability, and
features of the delivery of care); and, personal characteristics (sociodemographics,
health status and behaviors, and pregnancy-related variables). Univariate
and multivariable analyses were conducted to explore the relations between
personal characteristics and satisfaction and between care characteristics
and satisfaction.
RESULTS: For the overall sample, the following prenatal
care characteristics were associated with increased satisfaction: having
procedures explained by the provider, short waiting times at the prenatal
care site, the availability of ancillary services, and reporting that
the prenatal care practitioner was male. When examining the data by ethnicity,
whether the provider explained procedures was the most important determinant
of satisfaction for both African-American and Mexican-American women.
CONCLUSIONS: Knowledge of the care characteristics that
impact low-income pregnant women's satisfaction can be utilized to alter
service delivery to increase use of prenatal care and ultimately to improve
perinatal outcomes.
PMID: 9596059 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]