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HEALTH STATUS >
MATERNAL HEALTH PRENATAL CARE Prenatal care is an important factor in achieving a healthy
pregnancy outcome. Receiving early prenatal care can help to reduce
the incidence of perinatal illness, disability, and death by providing
health care advice to mothers and identifying and managing any chronic
or pregnancy-related risks. The percentage of mothers receiving
prenatal care in their first trimester of pregnancy increased slightly
from 2002 to 2003, from 83.7 percent to 84.1 percent. Overall this
figure has risen 11 percent since 1990, when only 75.8 percent of
women received first trimester care.
Although a positive trend was observed among most racial/ethnic
groups, there are still great disparities among these groups in
the likelihood of entering care early in pregnancy. In 2003, 89.0
percent of non-Hispanic White women entered care in the first trimester,
followed by Asian/Pacific Islander women at 85.4 percent, Hispanic
women at 77.4 percent, non-Hispanic Black women at 76.0 percent,
and American Indian women at 70.9 percent. Since 1990 the total
number of women receiving late or no care has dropped from 6.1 to
3.5 percent although the rate of late or no care remains high among
American Indian/Alaska Native women (7.6 percent), non-Hispanic
Black women (6.0 percent), and Hispanic women (5.3 percent).
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