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Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India

BACKGROUND: Maternal and neonatal outcomes in the immediate post-delivery period are critical indicators of quality of care. Data on childbirth outcomes in low-income settings usually require home visits, which can be constrained by cost and access. We report on the use of a call center to measure p...

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Autores principales: Gass, Jonathon D., Semrau, Katherine, Sana, Fatima, Mankar, Anup, Singh, Vinay Pratap, Fisher-Bowman, Jennifer, Neal, Brandon J., Tuller, Danielle E., Kumar, Bharath, Lipsitz, Stuart, Sharma, Narender, Kodkany, Bhala, Kumar, Vishwajeet, Gawande, Atul, Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6258538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30481209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207987
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author Gass, Jonathon D.
Semrau, Katherine
Sana, Fatima
Mankar, Anup
Singh, Vinay Pratap
Fisher-Bowman, Jennifer
Neal, Brandon J.
Tuller, Danielle E.
Kumar, Bharath
Lipsitz, Stuart
Sharma, Narender
Kodkany, Bhala
Kumar, Vishwajeet
Gawande, Atul
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
author_facet Gass, Jonathon D.
Semrau, Katherine
Sana, Fatima
Mankar, Anup
Singh, Vinay Pratap
Fisher-Bowman, Jennifer
Neal, Brandon J.
Tuller, Danielle E.
Kumar, Bharath
Lipsitz, Stuart
Sharma, Narender
Kodkany, Bhala
Kumar, Vishwajeet
Gawande, Atul
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
author_sort Gass, Jonathon D.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Maternal and neonatal outcomes in the immediate post-delivery period are critical indicators of quality of care. Data on childbirth outcomes in low-income settings usually require home visits, which can be constrained by cost and access. We report on the use of a call center to measure post-discharge outcomes within a multi-site improvement study of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India. METHODS: Of women delivering at study sites eligible for inclusion, 97.9% (n = 157,689) consented to follow-up. All consenting women delivering at study facilities were eligible to receive a phone call between days eight and 42 post-partum to obtain outcomes for the seven-day period after birth. Women unable to be contacted via phone were visited at home. Outcomes, including maternal and early neonatal mortality and maternal morbidity, were ascertained using a standardized script developed from validated survey questions. Data Quality Assurance (DQA) included accuracy (double coding of calls) and validity (consistency between two calls to the same household). Regression models were used to identify factors associated with inconsistency. FINDINGS: Over 23 months, outcomes were obtained by the call center for 98.0% (154,494/157,689) consenting women and their neonates. 87.9% of call center-obtained outcomes were captured by phone call alone and 12.1% required the assistance of a field worker. An additional 1.7% were obtained only by a field worker, 0.3% were lost-to-follow-up, and only 0.1% retracted consent. The call center captured outcomes with a median of 1 call (IQR 1–2). DQA found 98.0% accuracy; data validation demonstrated 93.7% consistency between the first and second call. In a regression model, significant predictors of inconsistency included cases with adverse outcomes (p<0.001), and different respondents on the first and validation call (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In areas with widespread mobile cell phone access and coverage, a call center is a viable and efficient approach for measurement of post-discharge childbirth outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-62585382018-12-06 Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India Gass, Jonathon D. Semrau, Katherine Sana, Fatima Mankar, Anup Singh, Vinay Pratap Fisher-Bowman, Jennifer Neal, Brandon J. Tuller, Danielle E. Kumar, Bharath Lipsitz, Stuart Sharma, Narender Kodkany, Bhala Kumar, Vishwajeet Gawande, Atul Hirschhorn, Lisa R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Maternal and neonatal outcomes in the immediate post-delivery period are critical indicators of quality of care. Data on childbirth outcomes in low-income settings usually require home visits, which can be constrained by cost and access. We report on the use of a call center to measure post-discharge outcomes within a multi-site improvement study of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India. METHODS: Of women delivering at study sites eligible for inclusion, 97.9% (n = 157,689) consented to follow-up. All consenting women delivering at study facilities were eligible to receive a phone call between days eight and 42 post-partum to obtain outcomes for the seven-day period after birth. Women unable to be contacted via phone were visited at home. Outcomes, including maternal and early neonatal mortality and maternal morbidity, were ascertained using a standardized script developed from validated survey questions. Data Quality Assurance (DQA) included accuracy (double coding of calls) and validity (consistency between two calls to the same household). Regression models were used to identify factors associated with inconsistency. FINDINGS: Over 23 months, outcomes were obtained by the call center for 98.0% (154,494/157,689) consenting women and their neonates. 87.9% of call center-obtained outcomes were captured by phone call alone and 12.1% required the assistance of a field worker. An additional 1.7% were obtained only by a field worker, 0.3% were lost-to-follow-up, and only 0.1% retracted consent. The call center captured outcomes with a median of 1 call (IQR 1–2). DQA found 98.0% accuracy; data validation demonstrated 93.7% consistency between the first and second call. In a regression model, significant predictors of inconsistency included cases with adverse outcomes (p<0.001), and different respondents on the first and validation call (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: In areas with widespread mobile cell phone access and coverage, a call center is a viable and efficient approach for measurement of post-discharge childbirth outcomes. Public Library of Science 2018-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6258538/ /pubmed/30481209 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207987 Text en © 2018 Gass et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gass, Jonathon D.
Semrau, Katherine
Sana, Fatima
Mankar, Anup
Singh, Vinay Pratap
Fisher-Bowman, Jennifer
Neal, Brandon J.
Tuller, Danielle E.
Kumar, Bharath
Lipsitz, Stuart
Sharma, Narender
Kodkany, Bhala
Kumar, Vishwajeet
Gawande, Atul
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_fullStr Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_short Evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in Uttar Pradesh, India
title_sort evaluation of a call center to assess post-discharge maternal and early neonatal outcomes of facility-based childbirth in uttar pradesh, india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6258538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30481209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207987
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