From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Assessing The Birth—Parent Infant Dyad
Date September 14, 2023 8:01 PM
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ICYMI, Be sure to check out this week's episode of A Health Podyssey
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Thursday, September 14, 2023 | The Latest Research, Commentary, And News
From Health Affairs

Dear John,

ICYMI: Jack Chapel joined A Health Podyssey to discuss his recent paper
examining the worsening health and economic trends for Americans with
modest resources nearing retirement.

Listen

Exploring Birth Parent-Infant Dyad Perinatal Outcomes

Perinatal care measures often focus on either the birth parent or
infant, but in their article in the September issue of Health Affairs,
Sara Handley and coauthors explore the birth parent-infant dyad.

After linking birth parent and infant data for perinatal care during
birth hospitalization in five states between 2010-18, Handley and
coauthors find that 21.6 percent of birth parent-infant dyads
experienced at least once complication, and 9.6 percent experienced a
severe complication
.

Handley and coauthors find limited overlap of different types of
complications within the dyad, suggesting that "measures focused on
either the birth parent or the infant do not adequately account for
adverse events that occur in the other half of the dyad."

Handley and coauthors advocate for the use of measures that capture both
parent and infant care and outcomes, and call for the creation of policy
that supports the health of the parent-infant dyad.

Read More

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How Health Equity Accreditation is Changing Health Care

Listen to the second episode of our new health equity podcast, Research
and Justice For All
!

Research and Justice For All is sponsored by CVS Health and cohosted by
Sree Chaguturu, Chief Medical Officer (CVS Health), and Joneigh Khaldun,
Chief Health Equity Officer (CVS Health).

On the second episode
,
Chaguturu and Khaldun interview Bryan O. Buckley of the National
Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) about health equity accreditation
and why collaboration with communities is key to improving health
equity.

If you missed it, listen to the first episode

with Thomas Sequist.

Listen to the Second Episode

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