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Hospital characteristics associated with nurse staffing during labor and birth: Inequities for the most vulnerable maternity patients.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Evidence is limited on nurse staffing in maternity units. PURPOSE: To estimate the relationship between hospital characteristics and adherence with Association of Womens Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses nurse staffing guidelines. METHODS: We enrolled 3,471 registered nurses in a cross-sectional survey and obtained hospital characteristics from the 2018 American Hospital Association Annual Survey. We used mixed-effects linear regression models to estimate associations between hospital characteristics and staffing guideline adherence. FINDINGS: Overall, nurses reported strong adherence to AWHONN staffing guidelines (rated frequently or always met by ≥80% of respondents) in their hospitals. Higher birth volume, having a neonatal intensive care unit, teaching status, and higher percentage of births paid by Medicaid were all associated with lower mean guideline adherence scores. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Important gaps in staffing were reported more frequently at hospitals serving patients more likely to have medical or obstetric complications, leaving the most vulnerable patients at risk.

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