Relation of infant mortality to the availability of maternity care in rural Florida

J Am Board Fam Pract. 1995 Sep-Oct;8(5):392-9.

Abstract

Background: This cross-sectional study was designed to explore the impact of the availability of maternity care services on the infant mortality rates in nonmetropolitan (rural) counties in Florida.

Methods: We evaluated the sufficiency of physicians providing maternity care in each rural county. We then constructed a mathematical model to compare physician availability with the infant mortality rates for each county, while controlling for socioeconomic variables.

Results: Thirty-one family physicians and 974 obstetrician-gynecologists were delivering babies in Florida in 1991. Forty-seven counties were lacking in maternity care services; 45 of these counties had family physicians who practiced in the county but did not provide maternity care services. There was a negative correlation in rural counties between availability of maternity care services and infant mortality (R = -0.42, R2 = 0.176, P = 0.012), implying that 17.6 percent of the variation in rural Florida's infant mortality was explained by a ranking in physician availability. Multivariate analysis revealed that increasing infant death rates can be predicted by decreasing physician availability (P = 0.003). A multiplicative risk model developed for this study demonstrated that the loss of 1 family physician delivering babies would predict the increase of infant mortality by 2.3 percent, and the loss of 1 obstetrician-gynecologist increased infant mortality by 9.6 percent.

Conclusions: Access to maternity care for women in rural Florida is a problem that could be hampering Florida's ability to reduce its infant mortality rate. Family physicians appear to be the most geographically distributed health care providers in Florida; therefore, strategies should be developed to recruit Florida's rural family physicians into maternity care.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Female
  • Florida / epidemiology
  • Health Services Accessibility / statistics & numerical data*
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infant Mortality*
  • Linear Models
  • Maternal Health Services / statistics & numerical data*
  • Obstetrics
  • Physicians / supply & distribution
  • Physicians, Family / supply & distribution
  • Rural Population
  • Socioeconomic Factors