Clinic factors associated with utilization of a pregnancy-intention screening tool in community health centers.

2021 
Abstract Objective : Routine pregnancy intention screening in the primary care setting is a promising practice to help patients achieve their reproductive goals. We aim to describe the utilization of a pregnancy intention screening tool integrated in the electronic health record (EHR) of a national network of community health centers (CHCs) and identify clinic-level factors associated with tool use. Study Design : We conducted a clinic-level retrospective observational study to assess tool utilization during the first three years after the tool was made available in the EHR (November 2015 - October 2018). We describe characteristics of clinics with higher tool utilization (≥90th percentile) versus lower utilization ( Results : Across 194 clinics in our study sample which served 289,754 eligible female patients, the tool was used for 113,116 (39%). Medical assistants performed 60.3% of screenings and clinicians performed 11.2%. CHCs with higher tool utilization rates were more likely to be located in rural settings (RR 1.75, 95% CI 1.07-2.87) and serve patient populations with higher proportions of women (RR 1.32, 95% CI 1.24-1.41) and lower proportions of patients with non-English language preference (RR 0.92, 95% CI 0.89-0.95). Conclusions : Many health centers utilized pregnancy intention screening after an EHR-based tool was made available, though overall screening rates were low. Implications : Additional study of implementation strategies and effectiveness of pregnancy intention screening tools is needed. Implementation of future pregnancy intention screening interventions must be tailored to address clinic-level barriers and facilitators to screening.
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