Providing doula support to publicly insured women in central Texas: A financial cost–benefit analysis

Author:

Nehme Eileen K.12,Wilson Kimberly J.3,McGowan Robert4,Schuessler Kirkland R.12,Morse Sophie M.5,Patel Divya A.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Community Health The University of Texas Health Science Center Tyler Texas USA

2. Population Health, Office of Health Affairs The University of Texas System Austin Texas USA

3. Independent Consultant Austin Texas USA

4. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health, Austin Regional Campus Austin Texas USA

5. The Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDisparities in birth outcomes continue to exist in the United States, particularly for low‐income, publicly insured women. Doula support has been shown to be a cost‐effective intervention in predominantly middle‐to‐upper income White populations, and across all publicly insured women at the state level. This analysis extends previous studies by providing an estimate of benefits that incorporates variations in averted outcomes by race and ethnicity in the context of one region in Texas. The objectives of this study were to determine (1) whether the financial value of benefits provided by doula support exceeds the costs of delivering it; (2) whether the cost–benefit ratio differs by race and ethnicity; and (3) how different doula reimbursement levels affect the cost–benefit results with respect to pregnant people covered by Medicaid in central Texas.MethodsWe conducted a forward‐looking cost–benefit analysis using secondary data carried out over a short‐term time horizon taking a public payer perspective. We focused on a narrow set of health outcomes (preterm delivery and cesarean delivery) that was relatively straightforward to monetize. The current, usual care state was used as the comparison condition.ResultsProviding pregnant people covered by Texas Medicaid with access to doulas during their pregnancies was cost‐beneficial (benefit‐to‐cost ratio: 1.15) in the base model, and 65.7% of the time in probabilistic sensitivity analyses covering a feasible range of parameters. The intervention is most cost‐beneficial for Black women. Reimbursing doulas at $869 per client or more yielded costs that were greater than benefits, holding other parameters constant.ConclusionsExpanding Medicaid pregnancy‐related coverage to include doula services would be cost‐beneficial and improve health equity in Texas.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Reference30 articles.

1. Births: final data for 2015;Martin JA;Natl Vital Stat Rep,2017

2. United States Department of Health and Human Services (US DHHS) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).Linked Birth/Infant Death Records 1995–2018 as compiled from data provided by the 57 vital statistics jurisdictions through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program on CDC WONDER Online Database. Accessed September 29 2020.https://wonder.cdc.gov/lbd‐current.html

3. Births in the United States, 2020

4. Disrupting the Pathways of Social Determinants of Health: Doula Support during Pregnancy and Childbirth

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