Michelle H. Moniz
University of Michigan
114 Papers
210 Citations
Michelle H. Moniz is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 81 publications. Previous affiliations of Michelle H. Moniz include Robert Wood Johnson Foundation & University of Pittsburgh.
Chat about Author
Papers
Geographic access to assisted reproductive technology health care in the United States: a population-based cross-sectional study
TL;DR: Nearby geographic access to ART services is limited or absent for more than 25 million reproductive-age women (39.6% of the U.S. population) in the United States.
62
Characterization of Medicaid policy for immediate postpartum contraception.
Michelle H. Moniz,Vanessa K. Dalton,Matthew M. Davis,Jane Forman,Bradley E. Iott,Jessica Landgraf,Tammy Chang +6 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest several concrete strategies to remove policy-level barriers and promote facilitators of immediate postpartum LARC access in Medicaid agencies currently without it.
60
Inpatient Postpartum Long-Acting Reversible Contraception and Sterilization in the United States, 2008-2013.
Michelle H. Moniz,Tammy Chang,Michele Heisler,Lindsay K. Admon,Acham Gebremariam,Vanessa K. Dalton,Matthew M. Davis +6 more
TL;DR: Long-acting reversible contraception insertion increased from 1.86 to 13.5 per 10,000 deliveries but remained less than 2% of the sterilization rate, and inpatient postpartum LARC insertion is more likely among sicker, poorer women delivering at urban teaching hospitals.
58
Right-Sizing Prenatal Care to Meet Patients' Needs and Improve Maternity Care Value.
Alex F Peahl,Rebecca A. Gourevitch,Eva M Luo,Kimberly Fryer,Michelle H. Moniz,Vanessa K. Dalton,A. Mark Fendrick,Neel Shah +7 more
TL;DR: A new conceptual model for prenatal care is presented that incorporates both patients' medical and social needs into four phenotypes, and human-centered design methods are used to describe how better matching patient needs with prenatal services can increase the use of high-value services and decrease theUse of low- Value services.
57