Conference Coverage

Maternal health clinic teams with legal services to aid patients


 

AT ACOG 2023

– A novel partnership between a legal services program and a maternal health clinic is helping pregnant patients with issues such as housing or employment discrimination.

The Perinatal Legal Assistance and Well-being (P-LAW) program at Georgetown University, Washington, launched 2 years ago as a collaboration between GU’s Health Justice Alliance clinic and the Women’s and Infants Services division of nearby MedStar Washington Hospital Center, integrating attorneys into the health care team to offer no-cost legal aid for its diverse, urban population during the perinatal period. Since then, the effort has assisted more than 120 women.

“Our goal was to see how integrating a lawyer can help address some of those issues that, unfortunately, providers are not able to assist with because they go beyond the hospital or clinic walls,” said Roxana Richardson, JD, the project director and managing attorney for P-LAW, during a poster presentation at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. “Our initial findings showed that there are issues that patients were facing that needed an intervention from an attorney. We trained the providers and social workers to identify these issues so that we could intervene.”

Improving health by tackling legal barriers

Health-harming legal needs – social determinants of health that have a legal remedy – are drivers of poor health outcomes, particularly for Black women and children, Ms. Richardson said.

The program is one of few medical-legal partnerships specifically focused on the perinatal population. P-LAW is one component of a larger initiative at MedStar Health called DC Safe Babies Safe Moms. The initiative includes integrated mental health programming, treatment of health conditions that complicate pregnancy, assessments of social determinants of health, expanded support for lactation and nutrition, access to home visiting referrals, and extended postpartum follow-up. The work is supported through the A. James & Alice B. Clark Foundation.

Patients are evaluated for health-harming legal needs as part of a comprehensive social and behavioral health screening at their initial prenatal visit, 28-week appointment, and postpartum visit. Those who screen positive are contacted by a referral specialist on the health care team who confirms the patient has an active legal need and would like to be connected to the P-LAW team. The team then reaches out to conduct a legal intake and determine the appropriate course of action.

From March 2021 through February of this year, Ms. Richardson and others with the program have provided legal representation to 123 patients on 186 legal issues in areas such as public benefits, employment, and housing and family concerns. Services range from advising patients on steps they can take on their own (like reporting a housing condition issue to the Department of Buildings), to sending letters on patients’ behalf, to appearing in court. Most patients served were in their second and third trimesters of pregnancy. The majority were Black or African American, aged 20-34 years, and had incomes below 100% of the federal poverty level.

The most common legal issues were in the areas of public benefits (SNAP/food stamps, cash assistance), employment (parental leave, discrimination), housing (conditions, eviction), and family law (child support, domestic violence). Among the 186 issues, work has been completed on 106 concerns and 33 still have a case open; for 47, the client withdrew or ceased contact, Ms. Richardson reported.

Most times when obstetricians hear concerns like these, they wonder what to do, said Tamika Auguste, MD, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at MedStar Health. Having the P-LAW program as a resource is a huge help, she said. If patients express concerns, or if obstetricians uncover concerns during office visits, doctors can enter a referral directly in the electronic medical record.

Patients are “so relieved,” Dr. Auguste said in an interview, because they often wonder if their doctor can help. “Your doctor is only going to be able to help to a certain point. But to know they’re pregnant and they have this resource, and they’re going to get legal help, has been game-changing for so many patients.”

Pages

Next Article: