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. 2022 Oct 14;3(10):e223292. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2022.3292

Figure 3. Differences in Receipt of Postpartum Care With Existing National Quality Standards, by Health Insurance Type, Geography (Rural or Urban), and Race and Ethnicity.

Figure 3.

aP < .001

bP < .01

cP < .05

A, Combined receipt of both care components with existing national quality standards. B, Separate, individual receipt of depression screening and of contraceptive counseling. Data are from PRAMS 2016 to 2019 among patients attending a postpartum visit (n = 138 073), and are weighted to account for sample design, nonresponse, and noncoverage. Existing national quality standards include depression screening and contraceptive counseling. Bars show percentage-point risk differences with 95% CIs adjusted for maternal age, education, marital status, parity, pregnancy intention, cesarean delivery, prepregnancy obesity, and prepregnancy and pregnancy smoking, abuse, depression, diabetes, high blood pressure, and hypertension (note that single-identity models also adjust separately for the other individual identifiers). PRAMS refers to Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System.