Indicator: 56 - Prenatal Care

Why This Is Important
Early prenatal care allows women and their health care providers
to identify and, when possible, treat or correct health problems
and health-compromising behaviors that can be particularly damaging
during the initial stages of development. Increasing the percentage
of women that receive prenatal care can improve birth outcomes and
lower health care costs by reducing the likelihood of complications
during pregnancy and childbirth.

Where We Stand
In 1990, 84.2% of women in Maine received prenatal care in their
first trimester of pregnancy. For 1999, this indicator was at 88.7%,
somewhat better than the national percentage. The national and Maine
percentage receiving such care was largely unchanged from 1995 to
1999.
Data Sources and Context
The Maine data source for this indicator is the Office of Data,
Research and Vital Statistics, Bureau of Health, Maine Department
of Human Services; the data is available online at http://www.state.me.us/dhs/bohodr/DATAPAGE.HTM.
National statistics
come from the final births data reports put out annually by the
Nation Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (online at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/nvsr/nvsr.htm).
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