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Annals of family medicine · Jul 2024
Structural Racism in Newborn Drug Testing: Perspectives of Health Care and Child Protective Services Professionals.
- Carol Shetty, Lauren Oshman, Amanda Costa, Victoria Waidley, Emily Madlambayan, Madgean Joassaint, Katharine McCabe, Courtney Townsel, Justine P Wu, Christopher J Frank, and P Paul Chandanabhumma.
- Department of Family Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
- Ann Fam Med. 2024 Jul 1; 22 (4): 271278271-278.
PurposeBlack birthing parents and their newborns disproportionately experience newborn drug testing for prenatal substance exposure by health care professionals (HCPs), which contributes to Child Protective Services (CPS) reporting, family separation, and termination of parental rights. This qualitative study aims to interrogate dominant power structures by exploring knowledge, attitudes, and experiences of HCPs and CPS professionals regarding the influence of structural racism on inequities in newborn drug testing practices.MethodsWe conducted semistructured interviews with 30 physicians, midwives, nurses, social workers, and CPS professionals guided by an explanatory framework, and conducted inductive, reflexive thematic analysis.ResultsWe identified 3 primary themes: (1) levels of racism beyond the hospital structure contributed to higher rates of drug testing for Black newborns; (2) inconsistent hospital policies led to racialized application of state law and downstream CPS reporting; and (3) health care professionals knowledge of the benefits and disproportionate harms of CPS reporting on Black families influenced their decision making.ConclusionHealth care professionals recognized structural racism as a driver of disproportionate newborn drug testing. Lack of knowledge and skill limitations of HCPs were barriers to dismantling power structures, thus impeding systems-level change. Institutional changes should shift focus from biologic testing and reporting to supporting the mutual needs of birthing parent and child through family-centered substance use treatment. State and federal policy changes are needed to ensure health equity for Black families and eliminate reporting to CPS for prenatal substance exposure when no concern for child abuse and neglect exists.© 2024 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.
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