Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia

Problem: Infant mortality has declined steadily in the past decade, however, significant disparities associate with lack of adequate perinatal health services and barriers to access disproportionately impact women residing in rural areas. In Georgia, data suggest significant challenges with respect...

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Main Authors: Swati Raychowdhury, Stuart Tedders, Greta O'Steen, Sarah Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2007-04-01
Series:Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol2/iss1/4
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spelling doaj-416f053bc953498aaa6d51566fa24a792021-02-02T14:29:29ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityJournal of the Georgia Public Health Association2471-97732007-04-012110.20429/jgpha.2007.020104Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast GeorgiaSwati RaychowdhuryStuart TeddersGreta O'SteenSarah JonesProblem: Infant mortality has declined steadily in the past decade, however, significant disparities associate with lack of adequate perinatal health services and barriers to access disproportionately impact women residing in rural areas. In Georgia, data suggest significant challenges with respect to birth outcomes, and this problem seems to be exacerbated in rural regions of state. The objective of this presentation is to report on the impact of a regional perinatal health care collaborative implemented in rural southeast Georgia. Method: Analysis of pre-intervention and post-intervention birth outcomes (gestational age, birth weight and infant mortality) served as the focal point programmatic evaluation. Differences in mean gestational age and mean birth weight were analyzed using a t-test (α = 0.05). Proportional differences in low birth weight and infant mortality were assessed using the chi-square test (α = 0.05). Differences were investigated relative to race (white and nonwhite). Results: Analysis of white participants showed no significant difference in any birth outcomes investigated. Furthermore, analysis of non-white PHP participants suggested significant improvements in all birth weight (p < 0.001), gestational age (p = 0.007), low birth weight (p = 0.002), and infant mortality (p = 0.007). Conclusion: The perinatal health program in southeast Georgia demonstrated considerable effectiveness as measured through pre-intervention and post-intervention birth outcomes. The potential for improved health outcomes of high risk pregnant women and infants as a result of adequate perinatal care may also lead to the achievement of Healthy People 2010 within this region.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol2/iss1/4multi-level evaluationperinatal health programrural southeast georgia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Swati Raychowdhury
Stuart Tedders
Greta O'Steen
Sarah Jones
spellingShingle Swati Raychowdhury
Stuart Tedders
Greta O'Steen
Sarah Jones
Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
multi-level evaluation
perinatal health program
rural southeast georgia
author_facet Swati Raychowdhury
Stuart Tedders
Greta O'Steen
Sarah Jones
author_sort Swati Raychowdhury
title Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
title_short Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
title_full Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
title_fullStr Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
title_full_unstemmed Multi-Level Evaluation of a Perinatal Health Program in Rural Southeast Georgia
title_sort multi-level evaluation of a perinatal health program in rural southeast georgia
publisher Georgia Southern University
series Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
issn 2471-9773
publishDate 2007-04-01
description Problem: Infant mortality has declined steadily in the past decade, however, significant disparities associate with lack of adequate perinatal health services and barriers to access disproportionately impact women residing in rural areas. In Georgia, data suggest significant challenges with respect to birth outcomes, and this problem seems to be exacerbated in rural regions of state. The objective of this presentation is to report on the impact of a regional perinatal health care collaborative implemented in rural southeast Georgia. Method: Analysis of pre-intervention and post-intervention birth outcomes (gestational age, birth weight and infant mortality) served as the focal point programmatic evaluation. Differences in mean gestational age and mean birth weight were analyzed using a t-test (α = 0.05). Proportional differences in low birth weight and infant mortality were assessed using the chi-square test (α = 0.05). Differences were investigated relative to race (white and nonwhite). Results: Analysis of white participants showed no significant difference in any birth outcomes investigated. Furthermore, analysis of non-white PHP participants suggested significant improvements in all birth weight (p < 0.001), gestational age (p = 0.007), low birth weight (p = 0.002), and infant mortality (p = 0.007). Conclusion: The perinatal health program in southeast Georgia demonstrated considerable effectiveness as measured through pre-intervention and post-intervention birth outcomes. The potential for improved health outcomes of high risk pregnant women and infants as a result of adequate perinatal care may also lead to the achievement of Healthy People 2010 within this region.
topic multi-level evaluation
perinatal health program
rural southeast georgia
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol2/iss1/4
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