From the Journals

Consensus bundle has potential to affect postpartum morbidity, mortality


 

FROM OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Readiness prepares mothers, HCPs, and clinical settings for the fourth trimester

In the first phase, Readiness, there are three key parties involved: the woman experiencing pregnancy, the health care providers (HCPs) supporting her, and the clinical settings involved in her care. Each player has specific goals to achieve in this phase, women are responsible for four goals, health care providers have two goals, and clinical settings have five.

Prenatally, every woman should work with health care providers to develop a comprehensive, individualized postpartum care plan that designates a postpartum clinical “home” for addressing any care needed between birth and the “comprehensive postpartum visit.” The plan encourages the patient and her health care team give attention to social support, birth recovery, infant care and feeding plans, thoughts concerning future pregnancies, and specifically use of contraception, as well as any chronic health concerns and overall emotional well-being.

The plan should consist of a postpartum care team that includes friends and family and ensures that medical, material, and social support are available in the weeks following birth for both mother and baby.

The authors emphasized the importance for clinicians to develop a keen awareness of “reproductive justice,” which respects a woman’s right “to maintain personal bodily autonomy, have children, not have children, and parent the children we have in safe and sustainable communities.” They encouraged adopting a sensitivity to concerns deeply rooted in the history of family planning, which is perceived to have been “fraught by coercive tactics to incentivize sterilization and contraceptive implants among marginalized groups.” With this in mind, they urged clinicians to respectfully ask about the patient’s intentions before making any suggestions concerning future births and family planning preferences.

HCP readiness ensures that each woman “has a documented postpartum care plan and care team identified in the prenatal period.” HCPs are also responsible for developing and maintaining “a working knowledge of evidence-based evaluation and management of common issues facing the mother-infant dyad.”

Clinical setting readiness ensures that woman-centered postpartum care and education have been developed and optimized using adult learning principles whenever possible. Diversity of family structures, cultural traditions, and parenting practices are fully embraced. Dr. Stuebe and colleagues emphasized that traditional top-down teaching methods are ineffective and should be avoided.

Clinical setting readiness also ensures that systems are developed to pair families with community-based resources that provide medical follow-up as well as social and material support. Clinical protocols and reimbursement options should be available that give women easy access to preferred contraception. Systems should be in place that facilitate prompt, pertinent communication between in- and outpatient providers. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, clinical setting readiness demands the development of protocols to screen and treat key postpartum concerns, such as depression, substance use disorders, family violence, and even incontinence in coordination with locally identified specialists.

Recognition and prevention promotes accountability and establishes key guidelines

Recognition and prevention require coordinated participation between women experiencing pregnancy and the clinical environments supporting their care. In this phase, women are responsible for three goals; clinical environments have four goals.

Women are to be identified and respected as the expert most knowledgeable of their own needs, cautioned the authors. They should also be empowered to trust their instincts, seeking care as early and as often as needed in the weeks after they give birth. Postpartum care needs to be viewed as an ongoing process, not just a singular encounter.

Women also need to take ownership for their postpartum care plan, reviewing and revising it as needed in coordination with their health care providers before maternity discharge is complete. Every plan should include a comprehensive list of warning signs and recommended action plans when faced with life-threatening complications, a list of resources for lactation support, and a “first-call” phone number that identifies the postpartum medical providers available to address breastfeeding issues and for postpartum care visits, including prescheduled dates and times.

Lastly, women are to take responsibility for attending their postpartum visit. Although new guidance suggests that the comprehensive visit take place no later than 12 weeks post partum, it also recognizes multiple visits may be required to address individual needs. All women should have contact with a maternal care provider within 3 weeks post partum, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends.

Responsibility for recognition and prevention in the clinical setting begins with determining guidelines for early postpartum visits, considering chronic conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, or substance abuse disorder and risk for postpartum conditions such as wound complications or postpartum depression, the authors wrote. Ongoing care between inpatient and outpatient settings as well as between maternal and infant care providers is coordinated to ensure health and well-being of both patients. Screening and treatment of common comorbidities such as mental health issues, smoking, and substance use as well as issues related to unstable housing and food insecurities are also addressed in the clinical environment. Lastly, clinicians are tasked with ensuring that every patient has selected a primary care provider for ongoing care.

Response ensures key parties and resources are connected at every step

In the response phase, clinical settings and health care providers are the key participants and they have two goals each.

Every clinical setting is tasked with implementing treatment protocols and providing needed care or facilitating referral in a timely fashion. The importance of a “warm hand-off” and “face-to-face introduction to the specialist to whom the patient is being referred” is encouraged. They are also responsible for keeping an updated inventory of community resources on hand for such unmet needs as 24-hour hotlines, food banks, diaper banks, lactation support groups, and home-visiting programs.

Every health care provider is tasked with developing strategies designed to reach women who do not attend their comprehensive postpartum visit. They are also responsible for assessing the severity of identified needs, and arranging immediate transportation to appropriate facilities in life-threatening circumstances. In nonacute cases, the woman and her care providers work with her to make appropriate decisions.

Reporting gives health systems the opportunity to assess and improve

Sole responsibility in the reporting phase falls to every health system. In this phase, they have a total of six goals.

Health systems are ideally organized to convene strategy-sharing sessions with inpatient as well as outpatient professionals to evaluate successes and opportunities for improvement. They are equally qualified to identify and monitor such quality measures as postpartum emergency department utilization and readmission rates. They are tasked with working toward quality metrics that compare postpartum outcomes and prenatal intentions, including patient receipt of preferred contraception or completion of planned breastfeeding duration.

Health systems are expected to conduct quality improvement measures designed to reduce postpartum morbidity when preventable. They are also the logical choice for maintaining a clearinghouse for resources, in collaboration with the community, that is designed to meet the postpartum needs of women.

Lastly, they play an important role in ensuring that reimbursement policies are structured such that they do not disincentivize postpartum visits.

The consensus bundle encourages change in the way America treats its new mothers

Angela Bianco, MD, maternal and fetal medicine specialist at Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, also interviewed separately, noted: “I think the fact that ACOG has created a postpartum bundle for providers to use for guidance is long overdue. The current prenatal care paradigm focuses on numerous/intensive prenatal visits but only a single postpartum visit. Many women report feeling ill-equipped to navigate the challenges that arise post delivery, including self-care, newborn care, and breastfeeding. In addition, most women experience the impact of dramatic hormonal fluctuations resulting in mood alterations. Add profound sleep deprivation to this and the result is often some degree of postpartum blues and/or depression. The importance of anticipatory guidance for our patients cannot be underestimated. Helping to facilitate potential social support structures be in place prior to the birth is optimal. Providers should reinforce the importance of access to a variety of tools, including digital apps, community support groups, and 24/7 web access services. Moving forward, it should be considered unconscionable to send a new mother home without ensuring the appropriate resources are in place. Postpartum care should be tailored to a woman’s needs and may require multiple visits and/or referrals.”

Dr. Stuebe and colleagues, as well as Dr. Bianco, disclosed receiving honoraria for various projects. Funding for the study was supported by the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal and Child Health, which is funded by a grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration.

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