Pregnant Maori teens let down by system
Embargoed until 9am Friday 2 May
2014
Pregnant Maori teens let down by
system despite positive health-seeking behaviour
A new study dispels the myth that young pregnant Maori women delay access to antenatal care in their first trimester.
Rather, they are engaging early with health services to both confirm their pregnancy and initiate maternity care, but system barriers are delaying timely access to screening and enrolling with a lead maternity carer.
Published tomorrow (Friday, May 2) in the New Zealand Medical Journal, the study of 44 pregnant or recently pregnancy Maori women aged under 20 showed that, despite their youth and possible implications of finding out the were pregnant, most participants were proactive in taking steps to confirm their pregnancy, with primary care services such as the GP or a school or community-based youth specific health service.
However, this positive
health-seeking behaviour was often met with inadequate
information and support for young pregnant women navigating
the next steps in their maternity care journey, lead author
Charrissa Makowharemahihi says.
Many participants felt
inadequately supported to be able to identify, confirm and
enrol with a lead maternity carer (LMC). By contrast, those
who received proactive support at the first interaction with
health services had an appropriate maternity care pathway
toward obtaining early and seamless maternity care, Ms
Makowharemahihi says.
“Despite a publicly-funded
maternity system, the fragmentation between primary non-LMC
maternity care and LMC services had a negative impact on the
pregnancy journey for many of these young women, disrupting
access to early antenatal care.”
The potential
repercussions of this disruption are sobering, Ms
Makowharemahihi says.
“Perhaps the most sobering is that
babies of Maori women are almost twice as likely to have a
potentially avoidable death in the weeks immediately before
and after birth than babies of New Zealand European
mothers.”
Study co-author Dr Bev Lawton says being
young and pregnant is a risk factor for poor health outcomes
for both mother and baby, with teenage pregnancies often
associated with increased mortality of babies before and
after birth, low weight gain of the mother and premature
birth.
“In New Zealand, teenage mothers are at higher risk of stillbirth and neonatal death compared to older mothers. These differences can only be partially explained by socioeconomic status. Rather, they are part of a larger picture of health disparities that suggests there are system and health service factors contributing to differential health outcomes for Maori,” Dr Lawton says.
The study used the experiences of the participants to identify where and at what point the system and services are not working well for this group of women, she says.
“Increasing our knowledge about the circumstances and range of needs of pregnant Maori women aged under 20 is necessary to avoid increasing health inequalities for an already disadvantaged population group.”
Disruptions in access to maternity care could be addressed through emphasising an integrated seamless model of care with maternity care beginning at the first interaction with health care services, Dr Lawton says.
“At that point GPs could take responsibility for first trimester screening and navigation to a lead maternity carer.”
The study was funded by the Health Research Council and Ministry of Youth Development.