학술논문

The Feasibility of Tracking Elective Deliveries Prior to 39 Gestational Weeks: Lessons From Three California Projects.
Document Type
Article
Source
Maternal & Child Health Journal. Oct2015, Vol. 19 Issue 10, p2128-2137. 10p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
*BIRTH certificates
*CLINICAL medicine
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*GESTATIONAL age
*HOSPITALS
*INDUCED labor (Obstetrics)
*LONGITUDINAL method
*CASE studies
*QUALITY assurance
*RESEARCH funding
*QUALITATIVE research
*KEY performance indicators (Management)
*ELECTRONIC health records
Language
ISSN
1092-7875
Abstract
The tracking of elective deliveries (ED) prior to 39 gestational weeks has become a mandatory requirement for all hospitals with ≥1,100 deliveries for accreditation by The Joint Commission (TJC); however, the feasibility and accuracy of monitoring efforts remain problematic for many hospitals. Here, we evaluated the feasibility of three operational approaches to tracking ED. We used mixed methods to evaluate the feasibility of 3 different approaches to tracking ED: (1) using administrative data, (2) using electronic medical record (EMR) data, and (3) using targeted data collection in a county-wide quality improvement (QI) effort. For (1), we analyzed data from the California 2009 linked birth cohort dataset, and calculated hospital rates of ED using TJC technical specifications. For (2), we performed a case study of a project that recruited hospitals to provide EMR data for the TJC measure calculation. For (3), we performed a case study of a project that recruited hospitals to prospectively track elective inductions of labor. For (1), hospital discharge data were insufficient without supplementation from the EMR or birth certificate. For (2), legal and operational issues surrounding data sharing, and non-standardized data elements prohibited hospital participation. For (3), the QI approach successfully established policies and data collection systems yet lacked infrastructure to assure sustainability at a hospital or regional level. In summary, ED tracking required the coordination and support of multiple resources to enable hospitals to satisfactorily report on this measure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]