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Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries

BACKGROUND: A substantial proportion of maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity is attributable to gaps in quality of care. A systematic, standard-based tool for quality assessment and improvement for maternal and neonatal hospital care (QA/QI MN tool) was developed in 2009 by the World Health...

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Autores principales: Tamburlini, Giorgio, Bacci, Alberta, Daniele, Marina, Hodorogea, Stelian, Jeckaite, Dalia, Siupsinskas, Gelmius, Valente, Emanuelle Pessa, Stillo, Paola, Vezzini, Francesca, Bucagu, Maurice, Lincetto, Ornella
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society of Global Health 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7750018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33403104
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.10.020432
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author Tamburlini, Giorgio
Bacci, Alberta
Daniele, Marina
Hodorogea, Stelian
Jeckaite, Dalia
Siupsinskas, Gelmius
Valente, Emanuelle Pessa
Stillo, Paola
Vezzini, Francesca
Bucagu, Maurice
Lincetto, Ornella
author_facet Tamburlini, Giorgio
Bacci, Alberta
Daniele, Marina
Hodorogea, Stelian
Jeckaite, Dalia
Siupsinskas, Gelmius
Valente, Emanuelle Pessa
Stillo, Paola
Vezzini, Francesca
Bucagu, Maurice
Lincetto, Ornella
author_sort Tamburlini, Giorgio
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A substantial proportion of maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity is attributable to gaps in quality of care. A systematic, standard-based tool for quality assessment and improvement for maternal and neonatal hospital care (QA/QI MN tool) was developed in 2009 by the World Health Organization (WHO). The tool guides the assessment process along the whole continuum from admission to discharge, collects the views of the recipients of care and engages hospital mangers and staff in identifying gaps and drafting an action plan. METHODS: Publications describing use of the WHO QA/QI MN tool from 2009 to 2017 and reports retrievable from WHO or other development partners’ websites were searched and considered for inclusion in the review. Only assessments of hospitals were considered. Quality gaps were classified as regarding case management in maternal care, case management in neonatal care, hospital infrastructure, hospital policies and according to severity and frequency. Quotations from women regarding key issues in effective communication, respect and dignity, emotional support and costs incurred were selected. RESULTS: In the period 2009-2017, use of the WHO QA/QI MN tool was documented in 25 countries, belonging to Central and Eastern Europe (8), Central Asia (4), Sub-Saharan Africa (11), Latin America (1) and Middle East (1). Overall, 133 hospitals were assessed. The tool allowed to identify in great detail serious quality gaps including: insufficient or incomplete adherence to recommended evidence-based procedures for normal childbirth and maternal and neonatal complications; excess of inappropriate or unnecessary interventions; insufficient infection control; failure to provide respectful care, adequate communication and emotional support to mothers and babies; poor use of information generated locally to analyse processes and outcomes. These gaps were observed in all countries. Significant differences were observed among facilities belonging to the same health systems, ie, with very similar staffing, infrastructure and equipment. CONCLUSIONS: The experience made, the largest of this kind, provides comprehensive and detailed insight into the existing quality gaps in a wide variety of settings. QI cycles at facility level should be primarily based on assessments made by multidisciplinary teams of professionals to identify the parts of the care pathways which require improvement through a participatory approach involving managers, staff and patients.
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spelling pubmed-77500182021-01-04 Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries Tamburlini, Giorgio Bacci, Alberta Daniele, Marina Hodorogea, Stelian Jeckaite, Dalia Siupsinskas, Gelmius Valente, Emanuelle Pessa Stillo, Paola Vezzini, Francesca Bucagu, Maurice Lincetto, Ornella J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: A substantial proportion of maternal and neonatal mortality and morbidity is attributable to gaps in quality of care. A systematic, standard-based tool for quality assessment and improvement for maternal and neonatal hospital care (QA/QI MN tool) was developed in 2009 by the World Health Organization (WHO). The tool guides the assessment process along the whole continuum from admission to discharge, collects the views of the recipients of care and engages hospital mangers and staff in identifying gaps and drafting an action plan. METHODS: Publications describing use of the WHO QA/QI MN tool from 2009 to 2017 and reports retrievable from WHO or other development partners’ websites were searched and considered for inclusion in the review. Only assessments of hospitals were considered. Quality gaps were classified as regarding case management in maternal care, case management in neonatal care, hospital infrastructure, hospital policies and according to severity and frequency. Quotations from women regarding key issues in effective communication, respect and dignity, emotional support and costs incurred were selected. RESULTS: In the period 2009-2017, use of the WHO QA/QI MN tool was documented in 25 countries, belonging to Central and Eastern Europe (8), Central Asia (4), Sub-Saharan Africa (11), Latin America (1) and Middle East (1). Overall, 133 hospitals were assessed. The tool allowed to identify in great detail serious quality gaps including: insufficient or incomplete adherence to recommended evidence-based procedures for normal childbirth and maternal and neonatal complications; excess of inappropriate or unnecessary interventions; insufficient infection control; failure to provide respectful care, adequate communication and emotional support to mothers and babies; poor use of information generated locally to analyse processes and outcomes. These gaps were observed in all countries. Significant differences were observed among facilities belonging to the same health systems, ie, with very similar staffing, infrastructure and equipment. CONCLUSIONS: The experience made, the largest of this kind, provides comprehensive and detailed insight into the existing quality gaps in a wide variety of settings. QI cycles at facility level should be primarily based on assessments made by multidisciplinary teams of professionals to identify the parts of the care pathways which require improvement through a participatory approach involving managers, staff and patients. International Society of Global Health 2020-12 2020-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7750018/ /pubmed/33403104 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.10.020432 Text en Copyright © 2020 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Tamburlini, Giorgio
Bacci, Alberta
Daniele, Marina
Hodorogea, Stelian
Jeckaite, Dalia
Siupsinskas, Gelmius
Valente, Emanuelle Pessa
Stillo, Paola
Vezzini, Francesca
Bucagu, Maurice
Lincetto, Ornella
Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title_full Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title_fullStr Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title_full_unstemmed Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title_short Use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. Part 1: Review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
title_sort use of a participatory quality assessment and improvement tool for maternal and neonatal hospital care. part 1: review of implementation features and observed quality gaps in 25 countries
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7750018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33403104
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.10.020432
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