Preventing Health Disparities during COVID through Perinatal Home Screening as Black Authoritative Knowledge

2023.   Chapman, R.R., Mohamed, S.B., Rage, H. et al. Preventing Health Disparities during COVID through Perinatal Home Screening as Black Authoritative Knowledge. J. Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-023-01608-3

Abstract During COVID-19 epidemic, health protocols limited face-to-face perinatal visits and increased reliance on telehealth. To prevent increased health disparities among BIPOC pregnant patients in health-underserved areas, we used a pre-post survey design to pilot a study assessing (1) feasibility of transferring technology including a blood pressure (BP) cuf (BPC) and a home screening tool, (2) providers’ and patients’ acceptance and use of technology, and (3) benefts and challenges of using the technology. Specifc objectives included (1) increasing contact points between patients and perinatal providers; (2) decreasing barriers to reporting and treating maternal hypertension, stress/depression, and intimate partner violence (IPV)/domestic violence (DV); and (3) bundling to normalize and facilitate mental, emotional, and social health monitoring alongside BP screening. Findings confrm this model is feasible. Patients and providers used this bundling model to improve antenatal screening under COVID quarantine restrictions. More broadly, home-monitoring improved antenatal telehealth communication, provider diagnostics, referral and treatment, and bolstered patient autonomy through authoritative knowledge. Implementation challenges included provider resistance, disagreement with lower than ACOG BP values to initiate clinical contact and fear of service over-utilization, and patient and provider confusion about tool symbols due to limited training. We hypothesize that routinized pathologization and projection of crisis onto BIPOC people, bodies, and communities, especially around reproduction and continuity, may contribute to persistent racial/ethnic health disparities. Further research is needed to examine whether authoritative knowledge increases use of critical and timely perinatal services by strengthening embodied knowledge of marginalized patients and, thus, their autonomy and self-efficacy to enact self-care and self-advocacy.

Keywords Perinatal health disparities · Pre-eclampsia · Self-screening · Telehealth · COVID-19 · Authoritative knowledge.

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