Abstract

Populations with higher rates of being uninsured in the United States have inconsistent access to health care and struggle to find care that fits their needs. For many without access to regular health care, prenatal care can be an entry point for obtaining care related-and unrelated-to pregnancy. We aimed to understand people's lived experience of whether and how pregnancy status enables access to health care unrelated to pregnancy. This is a secondary analysis of 18 in-depth interviews collected between June 2015 and May 2017 as part of the Multistate Abortion Prenatal Study. Participants were new obstetrics patients at prenatal clinics in southern Louisiana and Baltimore, Maryland. Interviews were qualitatively analyzed using iterative thematic techniques to identify themes related to experiences navigating health care services on entry to prenatal care. Most participants were insured through Medicaid, and all participants had low incomes. Pregnancy status enabled access to health insurance for many participants. Prenatal care facilitated access to non-pregnancy-related health care that participants had otherwise been unable to obtain before their current pregnancies. However, entry into prenatal care did not mean all participants' health needs were adequately addressed and some reported ongoing unmet medical needs. Our findings point to pregnancy as a gateway to health care (and insurance) and, further, illustrate how prenatal care can serve as a gateway to other medical care. Participants' experiences demonstrate how access to health care for women with low incomes can be dependent on pregnancy status, even for non-pregnancy-related health needs.

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