Pregnancy Care Utilization, Experiences, and Outcomes among Undocumented Immigrants in the US: A Scoping Review

Citation:

Rose L. Molina, Alexandra Beecroft, Yessamin Pazos Herencia, Maria Bazan, Carrie Wade, Amanda DiMeo, Jeffrey Sprankle, and Margaret M. Sullivan. 3/2024. “Pregnancy Care Utilization, Experiences, and Outcomes among Undocumented Immigrants in the US: A Scoping Review.” Women's Health Issues. Publisher's Version

Abstract:

Background

Undocumented immigrants face many barriers in accessing pregnancy care, including language differences, implicit and explicit bias, limited or no insurance coverage, and fear about accessing services. With the national spotlight on maternal health inequities, the current literature on undocumented immigrants during pregnancy requires synthesis.

Objective

We aimed to describe the literature on pregnancy care utilization, experiences, and outcomes of undocumented individuals in the United States.

Methods

We performed a scoping review of original research studies in the United States that described the undocumented population specifically and examined pregnancy care utilization, experiences, and outcomes. Studies underwent title, abstract, and full-text review by two investigators. Data were extracted and synthesized using descriptive statistics and content analysis.

Results

A total of 5,940 articles were retrieved and 3,949 remained after de-duplication. After two investigators screened and reviewed the articles, 29 studies met inclusion criteria. The definition of undocumented individuals varied widely across studies. Of the 29 articles, 24 showed that undocumented status and anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric are associated with decreased care utilization and worse pregnancy outcomes, while inclusive health care and immigration policies are associated with increased prenatal and postnatal care utilization as well as improved pregnancy outcomes.

Conclusions

The small, heterogeneous literature on undocumented immigrants and pregnancy care is fraught with inconsistent definitions, precluding comparisons across studies. Despite areas in need of further research, the signal among published studies is that undocumented individuals experience variable access to pregnancy care, heightened fear and stress regarding their status during pregnancy, and worse outcomes compared with other groups, including documented immigrants.