Humanities & Social Sciences Communications (Sep 2022)

A pilot study: the impact of clinic-provided transportation on missed clinic visits and system costs among teenage mother–child dyads

  • Lao-Tzu Allan-Blitz,
  • Aaida Samad,
  • Kenya Homsley,
  • Sojourna Ferguson,
  • Simone Vais,
  • Perry Nagin,
  • Natalie Joseph

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-022-01342-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Transportation insecurity has profound impacts on the health and wellbeing of teenage parents and their children, who are at particularly high risk for missed clinic visits. In other settings, clinic-offered rideshare interventions have reduced the rates of missed visits. We conducted a one-arm pre-post time series analysis of missed visits before and after a pilot study rideshare intervention within a clinic specializing in the care of teenage parents and their children. We compared the number of missed visits during the study with the number during the preceding year (July 2019–March 2020), as well as the cost difference of missed visits, adjusting for inflation and clinic census. Of 153 rides scheduled, 106 (69.3%) were completed. Twenty-nine (29.9%) of 97 clinic visits were missed during the study period, compared to 145 (32.7%) of 443 comparison period visits (p-value = 0.59). The estimated cost difference of missed visits including intervention costs was a net savings of $90,830.32. However, the standardized cost difference was a net excess of $6.90 per clinic visit. We found no difference in rates of missed visits or costs, though likely impacted by the low census during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Given the potential to improve health disparities exacerbated by the pandemic, further research is warranted into the impact and utility of clinic-offered rideshare interventions.