Virtual care remuneration policy and postdischarge follow-up trends
D’Arienzo D, Mahant S, Austin PC, Yoshida-Montezuma Y, Guttmann A. JAMA Netw Open. 2026; 9(6): e2620021.
Introduction — Data on preventive care visits and long-term healthcare use patterns among children with prenatal opioid exposure remain limited. From a life course perspective, early impacts on health care engagement may shape patterns of health service use across childhood.
Objective — To characterise early and long-term healthcare service visits among children with prenatal opioid exposure using linked population-based health administrative databases from Ontario, Canada.
Methods — We conducted a population-based retrospective cohort study of live-born infants born between April 1, 2007, and March 31, 2018, who were born to mothers aged 15-50 years and who were eligible for provincial health insurance for at least 3 months before conception. Prenatal opioid use identified during routine prenatal care was extracted from clinical and perinatal health records. The primary outcome was the uptake of well-child visits until 24 months of age, an important early life preventive care period. Rates of all-cause inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department visits were examined and compared across the follow-up period and within specific time intervals up to 13 years of age.
Results — The final cohort totalled 1,343,653 live births, of whom 13,290 children (0.99%) had documented prenatal exposure to opioids. Prenatal opioid exposure was associated with reduced incidence of well-child visits (adjusted incidence rate ratio: 0.82 (95% CI: 0.81, 0.83)) from birth to 2 years. Exposed children were less likely to receive an enhanced 18-month well-child visit (adjusted risk ratio: 0.89 (95% CI: 0.88, 0.90)). Prenatal exposure was associated with increased rates of emergency department visits, specialist visits, hospitalisations and same-day surgery visits over the follow-up period. Differences in rates of health care visits were most pronounced in early childhood and attenuated for some services at older ages.
Conclusions — Prenatal opioid exposure was associated with reduced uptake of preventive health services and greater use of ambulatory care. This finding is consistent with a life course model, in which early gaps in preventive care may influence later-life care use patterns, and highlights the need for effective strategies to promote access to and engagement with preventive care services for opioid-exposed children.
Han A, Tremblay GP, Pugliese M, Fell DB, Corsi DJ. Int J Popul Data Sci. 2026; 11(3): 3229.
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