Improving Equitable Postpartum Care in an Urban Private Clinic with Predominantly Black Patients

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Yannique Tello DNP, APRN, CNM, WHNP-BC, RN, Kristin A. Gianelis DNP, APRN, ANP-BC, WHNP-BC
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Maternal health disparities based on race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic factors exist in the United States, with Black women experiencing significantly worse outcomes. With much of perinatal morbidity and mortality attributed to the postpartum period, attention to equitable postpartum care is necessary for addressing this disparity.

Process

A rapid-cycle quality improvement initiative was implemented in an urban clinic serving predominantly Black, Medicaid-insured clients. Although baseline data indicated 95% of clients experienced comorbidities, only 65% attended a comprehensive postpartum visit (PPV). The project's goal was to improve equitable postpartum care by increasing PPV attendance and quality of postpartum care to 90% in 8 weeks. The clinical team was engaged throughout to promote organizational change within the clinic. A provider checklist was implemented to improve PPV care metrics, and shared decision-making was initiated surrounding contraception and mood disorders. A care log tracked clinical practice guideline adherence with regular feedback informing the change process.

Outcomes

Postpartum care improved across a variety of factors studied over 8 weeks. The provider checklist prompted a 78% documentation rate of PPV care metrics, and care log tracking reflected an ending PPV attendance rate of 93%. Client satisfaction with postpartum care education was measured using a Likert scale of 1 to 5 (1 = dissatisfied and 5 = satisfied) with a noted improvement from a baseline score of 4.3 to an overall mean of 4.8.

Discussion

This quality initiative addressed a key factor in health equity for a predominantly Black, Medicaid-insured population in an urban clinic by raising PPV attendance rates above national standards of 90% and improving client satisfaction and the quality of care received during these visits. The project was low cost and created sustainable systems for maintaining evidence-based equitable care. Limitations included the coronavirus disease 19 pandemic, clinic staff turnover, and staff and client biases. Continued innovative research targeted at improving health equity is needed.

改善以黑人患者为主的城市私人诊所的产后护理公平性
导言美国存在着基于种族、民族和社会经济因素的孕产妇健康差异,其中黑人孕产妇的预后更差。由于围产期的发病率和死亡率大部分归因于产后,因此有必要关注产后护理的公平性,以解决这一差距。尽管基线数据显示 95% 的客户患有合并症,但只有 65% 的客户接受了全面的产后访视 (PPV)。该项目的目标是在 8 周内将 PPV 的就诊率和产后护理质量提高到 90%,从而改善产后护理的公平性。临床团队全程参与,以促进诊所内部的组织变革。为改善 PPV 护理指标,实施了提供者核对表,并围绕避孕和情绪障碍启动了共同决策。护理日志对临床实践指南的遵守情况进行跟踪,并定期提供反馈,为改革进程提供信息。提供者核对表促使 PPV 护理指标的记录率达到 78%,护理日志跟踪反映出最终的 PPV 出席率为 93%。客户对产后护理教育的满意度采用 1 到 5 级的李克特量表进行测量(1 = 不满意,5 = 满意),结果显示,客户的满意度从基线分 4.3 提高到总体平均分 4.8。该项目成本低,并建立了可持续的系统,以维持循证公平护理。局限性包括冠状病毒疾病 19 大流行、诊所人员流动以及工作人员和客户的偏见。需要继续开展以改善健康公平为目标的创新研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
103
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Midwifery & Women''s Health (JMWH) is a bimonthly, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the publication of original research and review articles that focus on midwifery and women''s health. JMWH provides a forum for interdisciplinary exchange across a broad range of women''s health issues. Manuscripts that address midwifery, women''s health, education, evidence-based practice, public health, policy, and research are welcomed
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