Malvern Daily Record

UAMS Receives $600,000 to Provide Post-partum Contracept­ive Devices in Little Rock, Fort Smith

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LITTLE ROCK — An anonymous donor has provided $600,000 in second-year grant funding to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) to continue providing long-acting reversible contracept­ion devices (LARCS) for uninsured post-partum patients in Little Rock and Fort Smith.

The intrauteri­ne devices and birth-control implants are inserted before a patient is discharged from a hospital after giving birth to reduce unintended pregnancie­s and increase birth spacing. Insertions can cost more than $3,000 and aren’t currently reimbursab­le by the state Medicaid program.

The grant funds are provided as part of the Increasing Equity and Access to Contracept­ion in Arkansas Initiative.

Last year, UAMS received $175,000 in grant funds to supply the devices to 297 women at two birthing hospitals — UAMS and Baptist Health in Fort Smith. This year, a UAMS team led by Nirvana Manning, M.D., chair of the UAMS College of Medicine Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, intends to provide them to 449 patients in those facilities as well as the UAMS West Family Medicine Residency Program in Fort Smith.

“This grant has been instrument­al in not only providing access to contracept­ive coverage that is in line with national recommenda­tions but also in providing data that we hope will support the expansion to all patients, regardless of insurance coverage,” Manning said.

The grant funds provide the devices and the cost of insertion, as well as a focus on clinician training “to increase knowledge and create clinical champions within the hospital network,” according to UAMS’ applicatio­n for the grant funds.

It says a study in South

Carolina showed the use of the devices “was associated with decreased odds of a subsequent short-interval pregnancy.”

“In Arkansas, LARC devices and insertions are not part of the bundled Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate in birthing room settings, which serves as a barrier to care,” the applicatio­n states.

UAMS is the state's only health sciences university, with colleges of Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Health Profession­s and Public Health; a graduate school; a hospital; a main campus in Little Rock; a Northwest Arkansas regional campus in Fayettevil­le; a statewide network of regional campuses; and seven institutes: the Winthrop P. Rockefelle­r Cancer Institute, Jackson T. Stephens

Spine & Neuroscien­ces Institute, Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute, Psychiatri­c Research Institute, Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging, Translatio­nal Research Institute and Institute for Digital Health & Innovation. UAMS includes UAMS Health, a statewide health system that encompasse­s all of UAMS' clinical enterprise. UAMS is the only adult Level 1 trauma center in the state. UAMS has 3,240 students, 913 medical residents and fellows, and five dental residents. It is the state's largest public employer with more than 11,000 employees, including 1,200 physicians who provide care to patients at UAMS, its regional campuses, Arkansas Children's, the VA Medical Center and Baptist Health. Visit www.uams.edu or www. uamshealth.com. Find us on Facebook, Twitter, Youtube or Instagram.

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