Andrea Tilstra

134 Followers
126 Following
30 Posts
Sociologist & Demographer | Postdoc @ Oxford’s LCDS & Nuffield College | Population health, Obstetric Interventions, Mortality | she/her
RT @selinkoksal
Undergoing fertility treatments might affect individuals' personal and social relationships. We explore the link between loneliness and medically assisted reproduction (MAR) in my PhD paper just out in @JofHSB co-authored with @alice_goisis.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00221465231167847

Tl;dr. Declines in healthcare use were largest for historically marginalised groups: those below the poverty line, females, & those with a migrant background.

New preprint w/ @MarkDVerhagen @arunfrey: http://tinyurl.com/5n8nf48b

@OxfordDemSci @SociologyOxford @NuffieldCollege
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RT @MarkDVerhagen
Non-COVID healthcare strongly declined at the start of the pandemic, but was this decline shared equally across the population? We answe…
https://twitter.com/MarkDVerhagen/status/1654082564267581440

Inequalities in Healthcare Use during the COVID-19 Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to severe reductions in non-COVID related healthcare use, but little is known whether this burden is shared equally across the population. This study investigates whether the reduction in administered care disproportionately affected certain sociodemographic strata, in particular marginalised groups. Using detailed medical claims data from the Dutch universal health care system and rich registry data that cover all residents in The Netherlands, we predict expected healthcare use based on pre-pandemic trends (2017– Feb 2020) and compare these expectations with observed healthcare use in 2020. Our findings reveal a substantial 10% decline in the number of weekly treated patients in 2020 relative to prior years. Furthermore, declines in healthcare use are unequally distributed and are more pronounced for individuals below the poverty line, females, the elderly, and foreign-born individuals, with cumulative relative risk ratios ranging from 1.09 to 1.22 higher than individuals above the poverty line, males, young, and native-born. These inequalities stem predominantly from declines in middle and low urgency procedures, and indicate that the pandemic has not only had an unequal toll in terms of the direct health burden of the pandemic, but has also had a differential impact on the use of non-COVID healthcare. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest. ### Funding Statement We acknowledge research funding and support from the Leverhulme Trust Large Centre Grant (A.F., A.M.T., M.D.V), ZonMW grant 10430252210004 (A.F., A.M.T., M.D.V.), Nuffield College (A.F., A.M.T., M.D.V.) and European Research Council grant ERC-2021-CoG-101002587 (A.M.T.). ### Author Declarations I confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained. Yes The details of the IRB/oversight body that provided approval or exemption for the research described are given below: The Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek I confirm that all necessary patient/participant consent has been obtained and the appropriate institutional forms have been archived, and that any patient/participant/sample identifiers included were not known to anyone (e.g., hospital staff, patients or participants themselves) outside the research group so cannot be used to identify individuals. Yes I understand that all clinical trials and any other prospective interventional studies must be registered with an ICMJE-approved registry, such as ClinicalTrials.gov. I confirm that any such study reported in the manuscript has been registered and the trial registration ID is provided (note: if posting a prospective study registered retrospectively, please provide a statement in the trial ID field explaining why the study was not registered in advance). Yes I have followed all appropriate research reporting guidelines, such as any relevant EQUATOR Network research reporting checklist(s) and other pertinent material, if applicable. Yes All data produced in the present study are based on non-public data available at the Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek pending institutional approval.

medRxiv
RT @medrxivpreprint
Inequalities in Healthcare Use during the COVID-19 Pandemic https://medrxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.04.26.23289095v1 #medRxiv

We also learned from @RRHDr and colleagues, who in their 2016 NEJM article, write about the importance of "centering at the margins." The work by Prof. Hardeman & team @CARHEumn offer critical insights into how the US continues to fail at this.

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1609535

To learn more about obstetric racism, I highly recommend reading work by @drdanaaindavis.

I find her article "Obstetric Racism: The Racial Politics of Pregnancy, Labor, & Birthing" and her book Reproductive Injustice particularly informative.

https://doi.org/10.1080/01459740.2018.1549389
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RT @Andrea_Tilstra
Lisa Marshall (@CUBoulder) wrote a summary piece on this in CU Boulder Today. She syncs our work with some scholars that…
https://twitter.com/Andrea_Tilstra/status/1651537653580398593

Obstetric Racism: The Racial Politics of Pregnancy, Labor, and Birthing

In this article, I analyze the birth stories of Black women living in the United States. Their birth stories describe various forms of racism during medical encounters while they were pregnant or d...

Taylor & Francis
Stuck at a paywall? Questions? Critiques? Don't hesitate to email me, or others on the authorship team.

Lisa Marshall (@CUBoulder) wrote a summary piece on this in CU Boulder Today. She syncs our work with some scholars that we learned from, including Dána-Ain Davis.

I recommend checking it out:

https://www.colorado.edu/today/2023/04/26/obstetric-racism-prevalent-us-fueling-rise-questionable-labor-inductions

‘Obstetric racism’ prevalent in US, fueling rise in questionable labor inductions

The study of 46 million births across nearly three decades is among the first to provide population-level statistical evidence of “obstetric racism,” a term coined recently to describe a concerning pattern of maltreatment of non-white pregnant women, including a disregard for their birthing wishes.

CU Boulder Today
(2) But, increases in IOL among the Black childbearing pop. are not explained by changes in risk factors among their own population;
...Rather these increases are partially explained by changes in risk factors among white childbearing populations.

Two pieces of evidence to show this:

(1) increases in IOL to white childbearing population are explained by changes in risk factors among white childbearing population (and not by changes among other races/ethnicities).

In a nutshell, we show:

Normative obstetric care has been responding to the needs/prefs of the white childbearing pop.

That is, changes in the demographic characteristics and risk factors of white pop are driving the rising use of induction of labor for all racial/ethnic pops.