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Development and Measurement of Guidelines-Based Quality Indicators of Caesarean Section Care in the Netherlands: A RAND-Modified Delphi Procedure and Retrospective Medical Chart Review

Authors :
Jeroen van Dillen
Mariëlle G. van Pampus
Sonja Melman
Wilbert A. Spaans
Karin de Boer
Det van Dijk
Ellen Schoorel
Hubertina C.J. Scheepers
Rosella P.M.G. Hermens
Henriëtte Burggraaf
Luc J.M. Smits
Wim van Wijngaarden
Tom H.M. Hasaart
Christine Willekes
Jan Derks
Maurice G.A.J. Wouters
Alieke de Roon-Immerzeel
Anneke Kwee
Jos van Roosmalen
Sander M. J. van Kuijk
E. Smid-Koopman
Jan G. Nijhuis
Diny G.E. Kolkman
Harry Visser
Anjoke J.M. Huisjes
Carmen D. Dirksen
Johannes J. Duvekot
Ben W.J. Mol
Arie Franx
Frans J.M.E. Roumen
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Cardiology
ICaR - Heartfailure and pulmonary arterial hypertension
Ethics, Law & Medical humanities
EMGO - Quality of care
Obstetrics and gynaecology
Promovendi ODB
Obstetrie & Gynaecologie
MUMC+: MA Arts Assistenten Obstetrie Gynaecologie (9)
Health Services Research
MUMC+: KIO Kemta (9)
Epidemiologie
RS: CAPHRI - R5 - Optimising Patient Care
MUMC+: MA Medische Staf Obstetrie Gynaecologie (9)
RS: GROW - R4 - Reproductive and Perinatal Medicine
MUMC+: MA Obstetrie Gynaecologie (3)
RS: CAPHRI - R2 - Creating Value-Based Health Care
Source :
PLoS ONE, 11(1). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, Vol 11, Iss 1, p e0145771 (2016), PLoS One (print), 11(1). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, 11(1):e0145771. Public Library of Science, PLOS ONE, 11(1):e0145771. Public Library of Science, PLoS One, 11, PLoS One, 11, 1, Melman, S, Schoorel, E C N, De Boer, K, Burggraaf, H, Derks, J B, Van Dijk, D, Van Dillen, J, Dirksen, C D, Duvekot, J J, Franx, A, Hasaart, T H M, Huisjes, A J M, Kolkman, D, Van Kuijk, S, Kwee, A, Mol, B W, Van Pampus, M G, De Roon-Immerzeel, A, Van Roosmalen, J J M, Roumen, F J M E, Smid-Koopman, E, Smits, L, Spaans, W A, Visser, H, Van Wijngaarden, W J, Willekes, C, Wouters, M G A J, Nijhuis, J G, Hermens, R P M G & Scheepers, H C J 2016, ' Development and measurement of guidelines-based quality indicators of caesarean section care in the Netherlands : A RAND-modified delphi procedure and retrospective medical chart review ', PLoS ONE, vol. 11, no. 1, e0145771 . https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145771, PLoS ONE [E], 11(1). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2016.

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 172293.PDF (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) BACKGROUND: There is an ongoing discussion on the rising CS rate worldwide. Suboptimal guideline adherence may be an important contributor to this rise. Before improvement of care can be established, optimal CS care in different settings has to be defined. This study aimed to develop and measure quality indicators to determine guideline adherence and identify target groups for improvement of care with direct effect on caesarean section (CS) rates. METHOD: Eighteen obstetricians and midwives participated in an expert panel for systematic CS quality indicator development according to the RAND-modified Delphi method. A multi-center study was performed and medical charts of 1024 women with a CS and a stratified and weighted randomly selected group of 1036 women with a vaginal delivery were analysed. Quality indicator frequency and adherence were scored in 2060 women with a CS or vaginal delivery. RESULTS: The expert panel developed 16 indicators on planned CS and 11 indicators on unplanned CS. Indicator adherence was calculated, defined as the number of women in a specific obstetrical situation in which care was performed as recommended in both planned and unplanned CS settings. The most frequently occurring obstetrical situations with low indicator adherence were: 1) suspected fetal distress (frequency 17%, adherence 46%), 2) non-progressive labour (frequency 12%, CS performed too early in over 75%), 3) continuous support during labour (frequency 88%, adherence 37%) and 4) previous CS (frequency 12%), with adequate counselling in 15%. CONCLUSIONS: We identified four concrete target groups for improvement of obstetrical care, which can be used as a starting point to reduce CS rates worldwide.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa56e844487d00fe414ca58f62a94bf9