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Nevin Manimala Statistics

Defining Prenatal Care Surveillance Metrics Using Electronic Health Record Data

JAMA Health Forum. 2026 Jun 1;7(6):e261295. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2026.1295.

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: Current pregnancy surveillance efforts in the US face substantial challenges in providing timely and accurate data on prenatal care use. Electronic health record (EHR) networks have the potential to enhance existing surveillance systems by providing near real-time, clinically documented data.

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether EHR network data could be used to define valid and reliable surveillance metrics of prenatal care use.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This longitudinal cohort study included US adults (age ≥18 years) who received prenatal care and delivered a live birth from January 1, 2023, to December 31, 2024, at a facility that used the Epic Cosmos EHR network.

EXPOSURE: Live birth at a facility that used the selected EHR network.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Prenatal care use was calculated as the proportions of patients who initiated care by the 13th week of pregnancy (early care) and who received adequate or better prenatal care (adequate care). Raking weights were applied to adjust the EHR sample to match the marginal distributions for US residents with live births by age, race and ethnicity, insurance, pregnancy risk factors, and geographic region. Electronic health records-based metrics were externally validated against published natality data estimates from National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) using the two 1-sided test of equivalence. Patterns by demographics, state, and year were examined.

RESULTS: In total, 1 963 496 patients (mean [SD] age, 29.5 [5.7] years; 100% women) had a live birth and evidence of prenatal care at a facility using the selected EHR network during the study period. Compared with all US birthing people (n = 7 224 951), patients who gave birth at a facility using the selected EHR network had lower Medicaid coverage (40.5% vs 21.1%) and a higher prevalence of pregnancy risk factors (eg, prior preterm birth: 4.0% vs 8.8%). After weighting to the national population, EHR-based estimates of early care were consistently lower than those from NCHS data (68.0% [95% CI, 67.9%-68.2%] vs 76.1% [95% CI, 76.1%-76.1%]). However, adequacy estimates were equivalent to NCHS-based estimates (76.0% [95% CI, 75.9%-76.2%] vs 75.2% [95% CI, 75.1%-75.2%]; P < .001 at 0.01 equivalence bound), aligned with expected demographic patterns, and were stable across place and time.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cohort study, EHR network data reliably informed surveillance of prenatal care adequacy after adjusting for nonrepresentativeness of the patient population. These findings suggest that near real-time availability of EHR data has the potential to improve the timeliness of population-level pregnancy surveillance to better inform policy, public health, and clinical efforts aimed at enhancing prenatal care access and use among individuals receiving inadequate care.

PMID:42247225 | DOI:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2026.1295

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