Ep 6 What are We Missing in Pregnancy Care When we Don’t Examine the Placenta: Conversation with Dr. Mana Parast, Part I
SN: Ep 5 Conversation with Carl Weiner
Many first time mothers experience the schedule of OB visits as informative: there are few visits in the beginning of the pregnancy and many near the end and one might take that to mean that there is more going on at the end than the beginning of gestation.
In fact, there is a tremendous amount of activity going on in the opening weeks of pregnancy, but until now, we understood very little of it, and had very limited ability to change our trajectory with any move other than delivery.
Today’s guest, Dr. Carl Weiner, has mined some of the early data of the first trimester to allow him and his team to predict whether a premature birth is likely on the horizon when the pregnant person is 12 weeks pregnant. Today we’ll talk about his exciting work.
To find Dr. Carl Weiner’s work, see: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=Carl+Weiner&sort=date
Ep 5 How Early Pregnancy Insights Could Transform Prenatal Care
Ep 4 How New Research on Uterine Contractions could Revolutionize How Labor is Monitored
Ep 3 Why “It’s Just PPD” Misses the Mark for so Many Mothers: Dr. Sharon Dekel, PhD
Ep 2 It’s Not “Mommy Brain”-How Hormones during Pregnancy Prepare the Brain for Parenting
Ep 1: How Maternal Health Data is Saving Lives
SN, Ep 1: Conversation with Dr. Elliot Main, Obstetrics & Gynecology, MFM
I am both hopeful and moved, AND filled with disbelief after my conversation with today’s guest. He is an OB who has done an inordinate amount of work to make birth safer first for Californians, then for women across the country. And his work, which you’ll hear about and be able to use in your own pregnancy, is inspiring.
What I can’t get my head around is the state of maternity care he set out to change in 2006, some of which remains unmoved.
Does it make sense that you don’t really know the quality of care you’ll get at your birth because hospitals didn’t keep track of their health outcomes in a useable way?
Does it make sense that C section rates vary widely between hospitals?
No dear listener, it does not.
We talk about the importance of data being collected and quickly disseminated so that hospitals actually know the quality of their maternal care and can compare their care with the care neighboring, and what should be competing hospitals, do, and you, too, as the consumer, can get a better handle on what you are walking into when you pick a hospital in which to give birth.
To find out more about California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, CMQCC: https://www.cmqcc.org/
Figure out if Your Hospital is a “Birthing Friendly” Hospital–to get this designation, hospitals and health systems have to report their progress on a maternal morbidity measure developed by the Center for Medicaid & Medicare services : https://data.cms.gov/provider-data/birthing-friendly-hospitals-and-health-systems
Compare Hospitals in Your Area
The Leapfrog Group: (rates hospitals in terms of C sections, high risk deliveries, and more): https://www.leapfroggroup.org/hospital-choice/choosing-right-hospital
Care Compare (feels like TripAdvisor for hospitals, based on patient surveys): https://www.medicare.gov/care-compare/?redirect=true&providerType=Hospital