Volume 44 | Number 5p1 | October 2009

Abstract List

Meredith B. Rosenthal Ph.D., Zhonghe Li, Audra D. Robertson, Arnold Milstein


Objective

To evaluate the impact of offering US$100 each to patients and their obstetricians or midwives for timely and comprehensive prenatal care on low birth weight, neonatal intensive care admissions, and total pediatric health care spending in the first year of life.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Claims and enrollment profiles of the predominantly low‐income and Hispanic participants of a union‐sponsored, health insurance plan from 1998 to 2001.


Study Design

Panel data analysis of outcomes and spending for participants and nonparticipants using instrumental variables to account for selection bias.


Data Collection/Abstraction Methods

Data provided were analyzed using ‐tests and chi‐squared tests to compare maternal characteristics and birth outcomes for incentive program participants and nonparticipants, with and without instrumental variables to address selection bias. Adjusted variables were analyzed using logistic regression models.


Principle Findings

Participation in the incentive program was significantly associated with lower odds of neonatal intensive care unit admission (0.45; 95 percent CI, 0.23–0.88) and spending in the first year of life (estimated elasticity of −0.07; 95 percent CI, −0.12 to −0.01), but not low birth weight (0.53; 95 percent CI, 0.23–1.18).


Conclusion

The use of patient and physician incentives may be an effective mechanism for improving use of recommended prenatal care and associated outcomes, particularly among low‐income women.