Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on racial disparities in neuraxial labor analgesia at a Texas level IV maternal care center
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings
Abstract
We hypothesized that racial disparities in labor epidural analgesia at our hospital that existed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic would be exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic. We examined patients who delivered vaginally at our hospital for the last 6 months of 2019 and the last 6 months of 2020. We performed joint testing of coefficient P values, and the interaction term between race and year of delivery was not significant (0.364). A multivariate logistic regression model found that Hispanic patients (odds ratio 0.555 [0.408, 0.756], P < 0.001) and Black or African American patients (odds ratio 0.613 [0.408, 0.921], P = 0.018) were less likely to receive labor epidural analgesia compared to White or Caucasian patients. Odds ratios of receiving labor epidural analgesia were higher with increasing gestational age (1.116 [1.067, 1.168], P < 0.001) and lower with increasing parity (0.789 [0.719, 0.867], P < 0.001). The year of birth that corresponded to before or during the COVID-19 pandemic did not predict whether a patient received labor epidural analgesia (1.247 [0.941, 1.652], P = 0.124). Because the interaction between race and year of birth was not statistically significant, we conclude that the COVID-19 pandemic did not exacerbate racial disparities in labor epidural analgesia at our hospital.
First Page
30
Last Page
33
DOI
10.1080/08998280.2022.2121106
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Recommended Citation
Torres, Abigail; Ruiz, Luis; Jepson, Logan; Howell, Megan; Carlson, Alexandra; Stacey, Joanna; Hammonds, Kendall; and Hofkamp, Michael P., "Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on racial disparities in neuraxial labor analgesia at a Texas level IV maternal care center" (2023). KCOM Student Publications. 37.
https://scholarworks.atsu.edu/kcom-student/37