“这是一个优先事项”:对马萨诸塞州孕产妇权益安全捆绑计划实施情况的定性分析。

Anna K Daoud, Elysia Larson, Tonia J Rhone, Claire R Conklin, Heather Olden, Kali Vitek, Howard Cabral, Eugene DeClercq, Ndidiamaka Amutah-Onukagha, Hafsatou Diop, Audra R Meadows
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在美国,黑人和白人在孕产妇严重发病率方面的不平等现象非常严重,而且还在不断加剧。在一些州,孕产妇安全捆绑计划(MSB)与缩小孕产妇健康中的种族公平差距有关。本研究旨在探讨马萨诸塞州五家医院的临床医生在实施平等孕产妇安全捆绑计划以解决围产期护理和分娩结果不平等问题时的观点和经验:2022 年秋季和 2023 年秋季(Equity MSB 实施前后),对产科护士、住院医师和主治医师进行了焦点小组讨论和访谈。讨论采用半结构化指南,该指南是根据实施研究综合框架(CFIR)制定的。讨论记录由两名分析师使用 NVivo 14 进行独立编码。使用 CFIR 开发了一个用于演绎编码的编码本。我们酌情添加了归纳编码。我们计算了 Cohen's kappa 系数来评估分析者之间的可靠性。主题通过迭代过程产生,并在不同研究时间点进行比较:每个时间点都有 15 名临床医生参与,他们的种族、民族、性别和职业分布相似。这些访谈产生了七个主题:1)领导层的支持对优先考虑公平的重要性;2)公平文化是实施的促进因素;3)需要改进自我报告的种族、民族和语言数据的收集、分层和传播流程;4)员工、时间和资金是必要的资源;5)需要尽早关注员工教育;6)医生和护士之间现有的隔阂以及将受训人员排除在外是实施的障碍;7)公平-MSB 与其他 MSB 之间的差异:结论:领导层优先考虑公平和公平文化是成功实施公平 MSB 要素的促进因素。所面临的挑战包括同事对变革的抵触、资源有限以及临床医生各自为政。与之前实施的 MSB 相比,参与者发现领导层将这项工作列为优先事项。当未来的医院团队开始实施以公平为重点的行动时,这些已知的促进因素和障碍应在实施前和实施初期阶段加以考虑和解决。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"It's a priority": a qualitative analysis of the implementation of a maternal equity safety bundle in Massachusetts.

Background: Black-White inequities in severe maternal morbidity in the United States are extreme and growing. Maternal safety bundles (MSBs) have been associated with closing racial equity gaps in maternal health in some states. The objective of this study was to explore clinician perspective and experiences of implementing an Equity maternal safety bundle across five hospitals in Massachusetts to address inequities in perinatal care and birth outcomes.

Methods: Focus group discussions and interviews were conducted in Fall 2022 and Fall 2023 (before and after Equity MSB implementation) among obstetric nurses, resident physicians, and attending physicians. Discussions were facilitated using a semi-structured guide developed using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). Transcripts were independently coded by two analysts using NVivo 14. A codebook was developed using CFIR for deductive coding. We added inductive codes as appropriate. We calculated Cohen's kappa coefficients to assess interrater reliability. Themes were generated through an iterative process and compared across study time points.

Results: Fifteen clinicians participated at each time point with similar distributions across race, ethnicity, gender, and profession. Seven themes emerged from these interviews: 1) the importance of leadership support to prioritize equity, 2) a culture of equity as a facilitator for implementation, 3) the need for improved processes for self-reported race, ethnicity, and language data collection, stratification, and dissemination, 4) staff, time, and funding as necessary resources, 5) the need for an early focus on staff education, 6) existing siloes between physicians and nurses and exclusion of trainees as barriers to implementation, and 7) differences between an Equity-MSB and other MSBs.

Conclusions: Leadership prioritization of equity and a culture of equity emerged as facilitators to successful implementation of elements of the Equity MSB. Challenges identified included resistance to change among colleagues, limited resources, and clinician siloes. When compared to previously implemented MSBs, participants found that leadership made this work a priority. As future hospital teams embark on implementing equity-focused action, these known facilitators and barriers should be considered and addressed during the pre- and early-implementation phases.

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