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www.childbirthconnection.org
Transforming Maternity Care
Blueprint for Action: Steps Toward a High Quality, High
Value Maternity Care System
Opportunities for Quality Collaboratives
NJHA, June 22, 2010
R. Rima Jolivet, CNM, MSN, MPHTransforming Maternity Care Project Director
Associate Director of ProgramsChildbirth Connection
www.childbirthconnection.org
Childbirth Connection
MissionTo improve the quality
of maternity care through research, education, advocacy, and policy.
www.childbirthconnection.org
US Maternity Care Facts…• 4.3 million births in 2007, the most ever recorded
• Maternal-newborn care is the most common reason for hospitalization, and accounts for 25% of all discharges
• 6 out of 10 most common hospital procedures are maternity-related
• The most common operating room procedure is cesarean section
• The national cesarean rate is 32% (another record high)
• Cesarean rates vary by payer: – private = 33.7%, Medicaid = 29.8%, uninsured = 25.4%
References at http://www.childbirthconnection.org/article.asp?ck=10621
www.childbirthconnection.org
…and Figures
• Combined maternal/newborn facility charges were $86 billion in 2006
• In 2006, 42% of all births billed to Medicaid
• In 2007, 53% of all hospital discharges billed to Medicaid were maternity-related
• Similarly, half of all births billed to private insurers
• 35% of all hospital discharges billed to private insurers were maternity-related
References at http://www.childbirthconnection.org/article.asp?ck=10621
www.childbirthconnection.org
New Jersey DoH data • In NJ, the rate of cesarean with no trial of labor has risen
significantly since the late 90’s while the rate of vaginal birth has declined steadily
• From 1999-2004, the annual growth in cesarean rates was greater than 5% for primary NTSV (standard), primary multip standard, primary singleton preterm, and repeat standard
• The nulliparous cesarean rate following induction rose 6%/yr from 1997-2008 for a cumulative increase of 102%, and the nulliparous CS rate with no trial of labor rose 14% for a cumulative increase of 368% over the same period
Denk, 2009
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Much of the care women receive is not consistent with the best evidence
The 2008 Milbank report reveals:• A pattern of wide practice variation, unwarranted by
health status or women’s preferences• Overuse of many practices that entail harm and waste
for mothers, babies, and the system at large• Other effective, high-value practices that are
systematically underusedSakala & Corry, 2008 (available at: www.childbirthconnection.org)
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The full reports are available at:
www.childbirthconnection.org
and
www.whijournal.com
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Transforming Maternity Care
2020 Vision for a High Quality, High Value Maternity Care System
• Fundamental values and principles that apply across the whole continuum of maternity care
• Goals for each phase and for providers and settings for maternity care
• Attributes of the larger system that can reliably provide high quality, high value care to all childbearing women, their newborns and families
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Blueprint for Action:Steps Toward a High Quality, High Value
Maternity Care System
• Five stakeholder workgroups developed detailed sector-specific reports
• Actionable strategies in 11 critical focus areas
• Synthesized into a comprehensive Blueprint for Action by the Symposium Steering Committee
• Full stakeholder reports are published online at:
www.childbirthconnection.org/workgroups
www.childbirthconnection.org
Blueprint for Action:Steps Toward a High Quality, High Value
Maternity Care System11 Critical Focus Areas:• Performance measurement and leveraging of
results
• Payment reform to align incentives with quality
• Disparities in access and outcomes of maternity care
• Improved functioning of the liability system
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Blueprint for Action:Steps Toward a High Quality, High Value
Maternity Care System11 Critical Focus Areas:• Scope of covered services for maternity care
• Coordination of maternity care across time, settings, and disciplines
• Clinical controversies (home birth, VBAC, vaginal breech and twin birth, elective induction, and maternal demand cesarean section)
• Decision making and consumer choice
• Scope, content, and availability of health professions education
• Workforce composition and distribution
• Development and use of health information technology (IT)
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Transforming Maternity Care: Looking Forward with Shared Perspective
Blueprint for Action:Steps Toward a High Quality, High Value Maternity
Care System
‘‘‘‘Who needs to do what, to, for, and with whom to Who needs to do what, to, for, and with whom to improve the quality of maternity care overimprove the quality of maternity care over
the next five years?’’the next five years?’’
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Blueprint for Action:Selected Recommendations and StrategiesPerformance Measurement and Leveraging of
Results• Develop, test, and submit to NQF measures to address crucial topical
gaps, including informed decision making, VBAC, comfort measures and pain relief, postpartum hospital practices that impact attachment and breastfeeding, and persistent physical and emotional problems that arise in the postpartum period.
• Identify a core subset of national consensus measures for rapid reporting. Begin implementation with pilots to identify barriers that may result due to administrative variation across and within systems, and scale up.
•Develop state or regional quality collaboratives that bring hospitals, clinicians, consumers, and payors together to test the impact of performance measures on P4P, audit and feedback, QI indicators.
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Blueprint for Action:Selected Recommendations and Strategies
Payment Reform to Align Incentives with Quality
• Build a better bundled payment system for maternity care, adapting “From Volume to Value” model to maternity care (Miller, 2008)
• Pilot the model through regional demonstration projects involving all payors and providers to decide on indicators and targets, to design mechanisms for cost- and revenue-sharing and incentives for value-based care coordination, and to test the outcomes of alternative payment models based on these determinants
• Encourage state Medicaid programs to use policy levers to coordinate implementation
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Blueprint for Action:Selected Recommendations and Strategies
Disparities in Access and Outcomes of Maternity Care
• Form quality collaboratives and community-based partnerships to evaluate and implement programs to close disparities in maternity care outcomes.
• Carry out comparative effectiveness research and apply disparities-sensitive criteria from the National Voluntary Consensus Standards for Ambulatory Care: part 2 (NQF, 2009) when collecting quality improvement data
• Test effect on outcomes and cost of preventive programs such as Centering Pregnancy, language translation, care coordination, doulas, nurse home visitation, and comprehensive breastfeeding promotion
www.childbirthconnection.org
Blueprint for Action:Selected Recommendations and Strategies
Improved Functioning of the Liability System•Widely adopt system-oriented patient safety and quality improvement programs, and measure and report experiences with malpractice claims and payments.
•Evaluate the impact on reduction of adverse events and liability experiences, and satisfaction of women and providers, of: the laborist model, various team models and mechanisms for community coordination, regular team training and emergency drills, evidence-based checklists, and policies that provide better rest for maternity care providers
•Pilot, evaluate, and share results of ‘‘enterprise liability’’ programs that relocate responsibility from individuals to systems.
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Blueprint for Action:Selected Recommendations and Strategies
Coordination of Maternity Care Across Time, Settings, and Disciplines
• Develop local and regional QI initiatives designed to improve coordination at the community level
• Establish mechanisms for 24-hour open access to MFM specialists by community providers for consultation, co-management , or referral
• Convene an inclusive, interdisciplinary team of FP, OB, MFM and midwives, and use actual community patient safety data on near misses and reportable adverse events to develop community-specific consensus risk criteria for level of care including settings and providers, replicating Intermountain’s model
• Conduct multi-disciplinary periodic review of all transfers and complications from community to higher levels of care to engage in joint problem solving
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The potentialto improvematernity careis within ourreach, but none of us cando it alone.
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Transforming Maternity Care: Looking Forward with Shared Perspective
The TMC Partnership: www.childbirthconnection.org/Partnership
• Outreach and dissemination to decision makers, including policy makers and legislators
• Joint Blueprint implementation projects of a significant scope, undertaken with organizations that have the capacity and resources to accelerate health system change
• The TMC Action Community: A forum for community-level partners to show support for the Vision and Blueprint, and get ideas and resources for ways to independently engage in this work within their own communities and practice settings
www.childbirthconnection.org
Thank You!
R. Rima Jolivet, CNM, MSN, MPH
Transforming Maternity Care Project DirectorAssociate Director of
ProgramsChildbirth Connection