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Assessing the performance of maternity care in Europe: A critical exploration of tools and indicators

Escuriet, Ram�n; White, Joanna; Beeckman, Katrien; Frith, Lucy; Leon-Larios, Fatima; Loytved, Christine; Luyben, Ans; Sinclair, Marlene; Van Teijlingen, Edwin

Assessing the performance of maternity care in Europe: A critical exploration of tools and indicators Thumbnail


Authors

Ram�n Escuriet

Jo White Jo.White@uwe.ac.uk
Senior Research Fellow in Public Involvement

Katrien Beeckman

Lucy Frith

Fatima Leon-Larios

Christine Loytved

Ans Luyben

Marlene Sinclair

Edwin Van Teijlingen



Abstract

© 2015 Escuriet et al. Background: This paper critically reviews published tools and indicators currently used to measure maternity care performance within Europe, focusing particularly on whether and how current approaches enable systematic appraisal of processes of minimal (or non-) intervention in support of physiological or "normal birth". The work formed part of COST Actions IS0907: "Childbirth Cultures, Concerns, and Consequences: Creating a dynamic EU framework for optimal maternity care" (2011-2014) and IS1405: Building Intrapartum Research Through Health - an interdisciplinary whole system approach to understanding and contextualising physiological labour and birth (BIRTH) (2014-). The Actions included the sharing of country experiences with the aim of promoting salutogenic approaches to maternity care. Methods: A structured literature search was conducted of material published between 2005 and 2013, incorporating research databases, published documents in english in peer-reviewed international journals and indicator databases which measured aspects of health care at a national and pan-national level. Given its emergence from two COST Actions the work, inevitably, focused on Europe, but findings may be relevant to other countries and regions. Results: A total of 388 indicators were identified, as well as seven tools specifically designed for capturing aspects of maternity care. Intrapartum care was the most frequently measured feature, through the application of process and outcome indicators. Postnatal and neonatal care of mother and baby were the least appraised areas. An over-riding focus on the quantification of technical intervention and adverse or undesirable outcomes was identified. Vaginal birth (no instruments) was occasionally cited as an indicator; besides this measurement few of the 388 indicators were found to be assessing non-intervention or "good" or positive outcomes more generally. Conclusions: The tools and indicators identified largely enable measurement of technical interventions and undesirable health (or pathological medical) outcomes. A physiological birth generally necessitates few, or no, interventions, yet most of the indicators presently applied fail to capture (a) this phenomenon, and (b) the relationship between different forms and processes of care, mode of birth and good or positive outcomes. A need was identified for indicators which capture non-intervention, reflecting the reality that most births are low-risk, requiring few, if any, technical medical procedures.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 22, 2015
Publication Date Nov 2, 2015
Deposit Date Nov 11, 2015
Publicly Available Date Feb 11, 2016
Journal BMC Health Services Research
Electronic ISSN 1472-6963
Publisher BioMed Central
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-015-1151-2
Keywords measurement, tools, evaluation, quality indicators, health services, normal birth, physiological birth
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/803725
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-015-1151-2
Contract Date Feb 11, 2016

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