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ORIGINAL RESEARCH |
From the 1Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington; 2Center for Health Workforce Studies, Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington; 3College of Nursing, Seattle University; and4 Seattle Midwifery School, Seattle, Washington.
OBJECTIVE: To describe recent changes in obstetric practice patterns and liability insurance premium costs and their consequences to Washington State obstetric providers (obstetriciangynecologists, family physicians, certified nurse midwives, licensed midwives).
METHODS: All obstetriciangynecologists, rural family physicians, certified nurse midwives, licensed midwives, and a simple random sample of urban family physicians were surveyed about demographic and practice characteristics, liability insurance characteristics, practice changes and limitations due to liability insurance issues, obstetric practices, and obstetric practice environment changes.
RESULTS: Fewer family physicians provide obstetric services than obstetriciangynecologists, certified nurse midwives, and licensed midwives. Mean liability insurance premiums for obstetric providers increased by 61% for obstetriciangynecologists, 75% for family physicians, 84% for certified nurse midwives, and 34% for licensed midwives from 2002 to 2004. Providers most common monetary responses to liability insurance issues were to reduce compensation and to raise cash through loans and liquidating assets. In the 2 years of markedly increased premiums, obstetriciangynecologists reported increasing their cesarean rates, their obstetric consultation rates, and the number of deliveries. They reported decreasing high-risk obstetric procedures during that same period.
CONCLUSION: Liability insurance premiums rose dramatically from 2002 to 2004 for Washingtons obstetric providers, leading many to make difficult financial decisions. Many obstetric providers reported a variety of practice changes during that interval. Although this studys results do not document an impending exodus of providers from obstetric practice, rural areas are most vulnerable because family physicians provide the majority of rural obstetric care and are less likely to practice obstetrics.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III
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