Volume 203, Issue 3 , Pages 207.e1-207.e3, September 2010
Scheduling the first prenatal visit: office-based delays
Objective
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the office-based component of delayed entry into prenatal care.
Study Design
Phone numbers for all obstetrics offices in a single state were obtained from a commercial list. A research assistant who posed as a newly pregnant, fully insured woman asked each clinic when she should come in for her first prenatal visit.
Results
Information was provided by 239 of the 279 (86%) offices. The recommended appointment times ranged from immediately (4 weeks of gestation) to 10.6 weeks, which averaged 6.37 weeks. Twenty-five percent of clinics recommended a first appointment at ≥8 weeks. Scheduling calls were not a source of prenatal advice: <5% of clinics asked about smoking, alcohol, or medical condition; 88% of clinics did not mention vitamins.
Conclusion
Office-based delays in scheduling the first prenatal visit occur in a substantial proportion of clinics, even for fully insured women. There is a need for a standard source of advice in early pregnancy.
Key words: clinic, pregnancy, prenatal care
Authorship and contribution to the article is limited to the 3 authors indicated. There was no outside funding or technical assistance with the production of this article.
Cite this article as: Nettleman MD, Brewer J, Stafford M. Scheduling the first prenatal visit: office-based delays. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2010;203:207.e1-3.
PII: S0002-9378(10)00700-3
doi:10.1016/j.ajog.2010.05.043
© 2010 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 203, Issue 3 , Pages 207.e1-207.e3, September 2010
