Creating Quality Improvement New Year Resolutions: Maternal and Newborn Care

Are you among the hospitals who are seeking to improve quality? Have you explored the Psychology of Quality Improvement?

Posted under: Maternal Health, Quality of Care

Hospitals across the country are looking forward to 2024 and sharing the vision of their strategic plans. If you are among the hospitals who are seeking to improve quality, have you explored the Psychology of Quality Improvement?

Last week, I joined others from across the United States at the National Institute for Children’s Health Quality (NICHQ) National Network of Perinatal Quality Collaboratives Annual Meeting. Rhode Island is fortunate to be one of many states funded to support its perinatal quality collaborative.

Many topics were consistently mentioned and I wanted to bring awareness to one of those topics here. Postpartum readmissions were one of the issues being addressed, and how we can continue to bring awareness to the key drivers of readmission.

According to the National Perinatal Information Center, between 2018 – 2022, the most frequently reported diagnosis related to postpartum readmission is preeclampsia. Severe hypertension and preeclampsia have continued to rise over the past five years, and that trend does not seem to be changing. Fortunately, there have been great strides in reductions in readmission due to infection, and postpartum hemorrhage has been relatively stable over the past five years.



Preeclampsia is not only the driver for postpartum readmission, but it has been a driver for cesarean birth as well. During the years 2018 – 2022, the NPIC Perinatal Database follows coded reasons for cesarean birth, and preeclampsia has had the highest increase over this same five year period.



Many hospitals are seeking resources to impact the rate of preeclampsia and hypertension that are being seen in obstetric units. Maternal morbidity and mortality discussions and review committees (MMRCs) continue to review maternal deaths associated with preeclampsia/severe hypertension/stroke and have finally begun to explore the impact that racism may have had in diagnosing/addressing/treating/responding to hypertension in Black women.

One of the most critical areas addressed during the NNPQC meeting was the Psychology of Quality Improvement. Yes, there is a foundational approach to QI projects that cannot be overstated. Dr. Veronica Gillespie-Bell (Louisiana) provided an outstanding primer on Creating Change and Managing Resistance (yes, managing the resistance to change). There are those who will embrace change. And there are those who will resist change. But there is a way ahead. And here are the secrets:

  • Define the change through an effective vision

  • Communicating the change

  • Building an improvement team(MUST include frontline staff)

  • Develop reinforcement strategies

  • Assess the climate for change—cultural, commitment, capacity readiness

  • Creating culture for change

  • Select the model for change

  • Understanding and managing resistance

  • Celebrate small wins


**normalization of deviance can completely derail change management**

It is very important to address normalization of deviance (NoD) within change management. NoD has been mentioned several times in these blogs over the past year. If you need a refresher, check out our previous discussions. Become familiar with the term. There are reasons that, on average, it takes 17 years to translate research to practice. This is one of them.

Are your frontline teams drivers or mere passengers in the quality improvement process? How can you leverage the bench strength of your teams to effectively create changes in patient care? If your frontline teams do not have an active role in your quality improvement initiatives, you are missing a critical voice in successful (and sustainable!!) change.

  • Are they ready to engage in QI work?

  • Did the team have any input in creating the QI project?

  • Are there identified champions and informal leaders who can contribute a diverse lens to the process?

  • Is there bandwidth available?

  • How many other projects and initiatives are underway?

  • Is this considered a priority among many others? Who is communicating that priority? (“This is something we have been told to do” versus “We have an opportunity to improve patient care and maternal outcomes”)

  • Is the team multidisciplinary and includes all facets of care?


It is important to include your patients and families in your quality improvement initiatives, particularly if the target population is patients. Let’s use maternal severe hypertension for a moment.

  • Do you have patients with lived experience on your Quality Improvement projects? How are you ensuring that diverse voices are a part of your work?

  • Have your patients reviewed your preeclampsia/hypertension discharge materials? Do they understand them? Are they in a language they understand?

  • Are you disaggregating your outcomes data by race and ethnicity? Are your time to treatment outcomes similar, or do you have glaring differences in treatment outcomes?


No matter your priority for this next year, whether it is maternal hypertension, postpartum hemorrhage, safely reducing primary cesarean birth, sepsis, maternal mental health, or other healthcare needs, creating a strategy to implement change in practice or process can take time. But let’s face it…our patients don’t have 17 years to implement change. They are relying on us now to provide the highest quality of evidence-based care.

As part of your New Year resolutions, think about adding sustainable change to your strategy. Change and sustainable change are two different concepts. Quality and patient safety are at or near the top of many hospitals’ strategic plans in 2024 and beyond, with many including high reliability as a metric of success. Achieving these goals are possible, but only with the cumulative efforts of data, knowledge, commitment to equity, and action. And yes, the psychology of quality improvement.

Here's to sustainable change and outstanding quality improvement in 2024. Happy New Year

If your team would like to incorporate sustainable quality improvement in your organization, NPIC can support your strategy. Reach out to us to learn more.
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Creating a Use Case for Maternal Data and Quality Improvement

Every quarter, NPIC provides member hospitals with a plethora of data. Data that can be tremendously helpful in creating and sustaining quality improvement action plans to support optimal outcomes in maternal and newborn inpatient care.

Posted under: Data & Analytics, Maternal Health

Every quarter, the National Perinatal Information Center provides member hospitals with a plethora of data…a hospital’s own data and comparisons to their subgroup and the entire NPIC database. This data can be tremendously helpful in creating and sustaining quality improvement action plans to support optimal outcomes in maternal and newborn inpatient care across the United States. While real-time data access is critical for day-to-day patient care, quarter-over-quarter data analysis can be useful to assess interventions and programmatic shifts.

So, I decided to examine a few areas many hospitals focus on, particularly postpartum readmissions and cesarean birth. And I also wanted to look back to 2019 and come forward to 2022, as yearly trends can inform of areas of opportunity. And both postpartum readmission and cesarean birth allow for such reflection and calls to action.

Postpartum Readmission
Many hospitals focus on postpartum readmission and for good reasons. Readmission rates tend to be used as a proxy for quality but can also be bellwethers for population health opportunities.

NPIC Database 2019 – 2023, Delivery Readmissions coded with:


Observations:
  1. Severe maternal hypertension and hemorrhage continue to be areas of focus secondary to AIM patient care bundles and The Joint Commission Patient Care Standards.

  2. Not every readmission is a failure. Education on maternal warning signs and when to seek care may drive some of these readmissions. It is important to identify the drivers of readmission and any education or information that may have led to better recognition of serious maternal complications. Educational tools such as AWHONN’s POST-BIRTH Warning Signs and Save Your Life tools or the Centers for Disease Control Hear Her Campaign should be used with all postpartum discharges.

    AWHONN
    CDC Hear Her Campaign

  3. Major puerperal infections have decreased which is a good sign for postpartum patients. Consistent preventive measures and early identification of infection and sepsis can be lifesaving. Learn more about maternal sepsis at the Sepsis Alliance and the Tara Hansen Foundation.

    Sepsis Alliance
    Tara Hansen Foundation

Cesarean Birth:
Healthy People 2030 has set a cesarean birth target of 23.6% for low-risk women with no prior births. States across the US have participated in the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health Safe Reduction of Primary Cesarean Birth patient safety bundle. The original patient safety bundle was launched in 2015. So how are we doing?



Well, as a nation, and as a database, we are not hitting the target. There are some hospitals that are getting it done and doing it well! I hope we can celebrate your work and the work you are doing to promote intended vaginal birth, and to reduce the likelihood of future cesarean birth. We look forward to continuing to engage with our top decile hospitals and supporting their work and supporting other hospitals looking to reduce their primary cesarean birth. Here are a few suggestions from some teams across the country:
  1. Celebrate successes, even small ones. Publicly highlight physicians, providers, nurses, and other team members who consistently finish with a vaginal birth. If you don’t follow Dr. Tiffany Montgomery on LinkedIn, think about it. She is the Lead for Perinatal Quality at Parkland Hospital in Dallas, consistently posting about supporting her teams’ wins in reducing primary cesarean birth. Contacting Dr. Montgomery should be your next step if you are looking for ideas.

  2. Don’t bite off more than you can chew. How many quality improvement projects do you have running at the same time? Are the same team members being tapped every time? Creating space for QI is important, but sustainable change is the key. Take the pulse of your team routinely, and don’t forget that frontline team members AND patient voices should always be included in any QI planning and implementation. The Safe Reduction of Primary Cesarean Birth patient care bundle requires a multidisciplinary approach that includes prenatal and intrapartum teams.

  3. Stratify your data by race and ethnicity. Yes, this is important. Stratify your cesarean delivery outcomes by race and ethnicity. The literature for years, including the NPIC database, has shown that Black women historically have higher cesarean birth rates. There are numerous reasons for this, but lack of shared decision-making and continuous labor support, and bias/racism inside and outside hospitals have been found to contribute to higher cesarean birth rates. When you report that cesarean birth rates are “equitable,” your data can support your efforts.

  4. Understand quality improvement. No, really understand it. QI is not a “one-and-done” approach. A true QI project requires planning, data exploration, team readiness assessment, and an authentic approach to including the patient’s voice (as NPIC has termed #AuthenticQI). Quality improvement also requires an investment of time (= money) and inertia. Institute for Healthcare Improvement has an excellent QI framework for reducing primary cesarean birth.
NPIC is proud to provide this brief overview of key maternal outcomes. Our goal is for you to use your data in the best possible way to promote optimal health, well-being, and outcomes for mothers and newborns in your hospitals and communities, and we are proud to be your partner.
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