Literature DB >> 18554384

Developing evidence-based maternity care in Iran: a quality improvement study.

Siamak Aghlmand1, Feizollah Akbari, Aboulfath Lameei, Kazem Mohammad, Rhonda Small, Mohammad Arab.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current Iranian perinatal statistics indicate that maternity care continues to need improvement. In response, we implemented a multi-faceted intervention to improve the quality of maternity care at an Iranian Social Security Hospital. Using a before-and-after design our aim was to improve the uptake of selected evidence based practices and more closely attend to identified women's needs and preferences.
METHODS: The major steps of the study were to (1) identify women's needs, values and preferences via interviews, (2) select through a process of professional consensus the top evidence-based clinical recommendations requiring local implementation (3) redesign care based on the selected evidence-based recommendations and women's views, and (4) implement the new care model. We measured the impact of the new care model on maternal satisfaction and caesarean birth rates utilising maternal surveys and medical record audit before and after implementation of the new care model.
RESULTS: Twenty women's needs and requirements as well as ten evidence-based clinical recommendations were selected as a basis for improving care. Following the introduction of the new model of care, women's satisfaction levels improved significantly on 16 of 20 items (p < 0.0001) compared with baseline. Seventy-eight percent of studied women experienced care consistent with the new model and fewer women had a caesarean birth (30% compared with 42% previously).
CONCLUSION: The introduction of a quality improvement care model improved compliance with evidence-based guidelines and was associated with an improvement in women's satisfaction levels and a reduction in rates of caesarean birth.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18554384      PMCID: PMC2443790          DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-8-20

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth        ISSN: 1471-2393            Impact factor:   3.007


Background

Around one million women give birth annually in Iran, with 90% receiving maternity care in hospital. Maternal mortality is still high compared with rates in developed countries (37.5 per 100000 live births), as is neonatal mortality (16.9 per 1000 live births), and the caesarean birth rate is close to 40% [1]. Of the 295 registered maternal deaths in 2005, 87.6% occurred in hospitals and 60% were found to be related to medical errors [2]. Despite many advances in the Iranian health care system over recent decades, these statistics alone show that there is still much room for improvement in the quality of maternity care [3]. Worldwide, several methods have been used for improving the quality of maternity care in hospitals, such as clinical practice guidelines (CPGs), clinical pathways, and clinical audit [4-11]. Almost all of these methods have their origin in evidence-based practice (EBP) to apply the best evidence in clinical care [12]. EBP is simply the integration of the best available research-based evidence, clinical expertise, and patient needs, values and preferences to develop a system of quality care [13]. Quality improvements thus require professional consensus about implementation of research-based clinical evidence, and attention to patient needs, values and preferences [14]. Although EB practice has been recognised as necessary for quality care in developed countries, it has often been conceptualised in terms of research-based clinical evidence and less attention has been paid to patient needs and preferences [15]. Yet service quality has been defined as meeting or exceeding service users' needs [16,17]. Patient satisfaction has indeed been recognised as an important outcome measure for the quality of health care since the late 1980s [18]. Furthermore identifying patient needs and requirements has been judged essential for both measuring and improving quality of care [19]. In order to improve the quality of maternity care at an Iranian Social Security Hospital serving a poor population (Fayazbakhsh Hospital), we measured the impact on women's satisfaction and caesarean birth rates of a multifaceted intervention to improve uptake of selected EB practices, utilising a before-and-after study design.

Methods

Ethics approval to conduct the study was granted from the Ethics Committee of Tehran University of Medical Sciences and Urmia University of Medical Sciences (dated 20 September 2005) after submitting the information that would be given to the participants. All participants gave their written consent prior to the interviews and before-and-after surveys. A four-step process was utilised to develop, implement and evaluate more evidence based maternity care at the study hospital [20].

Step 1: Selecting evidence-based practices

In October 2005, a small team of health care providers (including an obstetrician, a neonatologist, an anaesthetist, and four midwives) was formed at the maternity ward to oversee the improvement. This team identified the most important EB practices from the following sources:

Women's needs, values and preferences

Between 31 January and 4 February 2006, the midwives of the team conducted in-depth structured interviews with women following birth (n = 18) to identify their needs and requirements using 11 open-ended questions (Table 1). The conduct of the interview had been standardised with the use of a detailed flowchart to be confident about consistency and reliability [see Additional file 1].
Table 1

The main open-ended questions of the interview with women in the postpartum unit, Fayazbakhsh hospital. The questions are designed based on 5Wh1H format (who, what, when, where, why, and how questions)

NoQuestion
1Are you satisfied with type of your birth you have just had and why*?
2Which type of birth would you prefer for next time and why?
3Why did you choose this hospital?
4Why did you not choose another hospital closer to your home?
5Which experiences were positive during the hospital stay and why?
6Which experiences were negative during the hospital stay and why?
7Are there other services that you expected to receive why and how?
8Who do you remember and why?
9Which places do you remember and why?
10Which moments do you remember and why?
11Do you have any recommendation for better services in future?

*Patient needs and requirements are only identified by 'Why' questions

The main open-ended questions of the interview with women in the postpartum unit, Fayazbakhsh hospital. The questions are designed based on 5Wh1H format (who, what, when, where, why, and how questions) *Patient needs and requirements are only identified by 'Why' questions Through these interviews, fifty-four needs and requirements were identified and numbered. Subsequently, the team members helped a subgroup of the interviewees to rank identified needs and requirements using analytical hierarchy process (AHP) [21]. Pairwise comparison of identified needs and requirements using a 1–9 scale was the basis of AHP, with the 20 highest-ranked needs and requirements (comprising 70% cumulative weight) finally selected for further attention (Table 2).
Table 2

The highly-ranked women's needs and requirements weighed by analytical hierarchy process (AHP)

Needs and requirements% Relative weight% Cumulative weight
1. Well-being of baby9.09.0
2. Well-being of women6.415.4
3. Low-pain labour5.621.0
4. Caring and sensitive staff4.325.3
5. Frequent monitoring4.229.5
6. Privacy during birth and vaginal examination3.833.3
7. Quick response to requests3.136.4
8. Labour and childbirth education2.939.3
9. Provision of comfort2.942.2
10. Listening to the fetal heartbeat2.845.0
11. Vaginal birth2.847.8
12. Companionship after birth2.750.5
13. Immediate opportunity to see the newborn2.553.0
14. Bed linen changed frequently2.555.5
15. Improved hospital facilities2.457.9
16. Painless vaginal examination2.360.2
17. Short labour2.262.4
18. Helping mother with breastfeeding2.264.6
19. Clean labour ward2.266.8
20. Quick admission2.068.8

* Cumulative weight demonstrates that 37% of the most important needs and requirements (20 of 54) address about 70% of women values and preferences.

The highly-ranked women's needs and requirements weighed by analytical hierarchy process (AHP) * Cumulative weight demonstrates that 37% of the most important needs and requirements (20 of 54) address about 70% of women values and preferences.

Research-based clinical evidence

The team reviewed the most well-known EB clinical practice guidelines: NGC (National Guideline Clearinghouse) and NICE (National Institute for Clinical Excellence) [22,23]. The AGREE (Appraisal of Guidelines Research & Evaluation) Instrument was then used to assess the quality (internal and external validity) of the guidelines. AGREE consists of six domains with each domain intended to capture a separate dimension of guideline quality such as scope, clarity, and applicability [24]. Twenty-eight high-quality clinical recommendations were selected, nine of which were already implemented routinely, but 19 of which had not been followed at the study hospital (Table 3).
Table 3

Evidence-based clinical recommendations.

Not implemented routinely prior to intervention (n = 19)

Implemented routinely prior to intervention (n = 9)Selected for intervention (n = 10)Not selected for intervention (n = 9)
Amniotomy unless contraindicatedAdmission in labour phaseElective episiotomy
Nurse auscultory monitoringAdequate pain relief (only by parenteral analgesics)Vaginal birth after caesarean birth
Continuous electronic fetal monitoring-external (EFM-ext), if indicatedNon-use of routine enemaRestriction of elective caesarean birth
Documentation of progress of labourCompanionship (only after birth)Alternative position for delivery
Regular cervical examMobility during the first stage of labourContinuous electronic fetal monitoring-internal (EFM-int), if indicated
Chart evaluationOral fluidsAmnioinfusion for meconium treatment and/or oligohydramnios
Operative vaginal delivery, if indicatedRemedial techniques in uteroplacental insufficiency or cord compromiseVibroacoustic test or scalp stimulation
Prevention of postpartum haemorrhageManagement of arrest disordersThe scalp pH test
Management of high-risk situations such as preterm and post term labour, bleeding, gestational diabetes and hypertensionManagement of protraction disordersFetal Pulse Oximetry (FPO)
Active management of the third stage of labour

The left column shows the evidence-based clinical recommendations implemented routinely at the hospital. The next two columns display the result of professional consensus about which practices would be adopted in the new care model and which would not be adopted in the new model

Evidence-based clinical recommendations. The left column shows the evidence-based clinical recommendations implemented routinely at the hospital. The next two columns display the result of professional consensus about which practices would be adopted in the new care model and which would not be adopted in the new model

Professional consensus

Using a Delphi technique, the physicians of the team tailored the 19 selected EB clinical recommendations to the conditions of the maternity ward according to four criteria (availability of resources, the physical environment of the maternity ward, clinical experience and culture, and correspondence with women's needs and requirements) [13]. To this end, the 19 recommendations were separately ranked for each criterion using a 1–5 scale by the physicians. Each ranking was continually modified until all the physicians achieved a consensus about the order of the recommendations. Finally, 10 of the 19 EB recommendations not already routinely implemented were chosen as the basis for improving maternity care (Table 3).

Step 2: Assessing current care

We assessed women's satisfaction, clinical adherence to EBP, and the rate of caesarean birth at the hospital prior to implementation of the new care model. The team conducted a baseline survey with a representative sample of women, who had given birth at the study hospital within the previous year, to appraise their level of satisfaction with given services. To this end, a self-completed questionnaire, using a Likert scale (1 for 'poor' to 5 for 'excellent'), was designed based on the previously identified 20 needs and requirements [21]. The questionnaire was piloted with 15 women. From piloting, the variance related to women's preferences was estimated (= 1.92) and the required sample size was calculated (n = 82 with α = 0.05, S2 = 1.92, and d = 0.3). After modifying three questions, the final questionnaire provided scale scores ranging from 0–21 and was found to be reliable, with a Cronbach's α of 0.90 indicating very high internal consistency [25]. A random sample of 100 women was drawn up from the list of all women who had given birth in the previous 12 months (= 2213) using a table of random numbers. Given low levels of education and other cultural factors, the team decided to visit women in their homes in order to explain the study and support women to complete the questionnaires. A detailed flowchart of the process for visiting women was used to increase the reliability of the survey [see Additional file 2]. Between 23 July and 19 September 2006, the questionnaires were voluntarily completed by participants (= 89) at home (response rate = 89%). Two women had moved, one woman declined to take part and eight women were unable to complete the questionnaire due to literacy problems. Analysis of the survey was undertaken calculating the mean and variance of the responses to each question. The team members also assessed clinical adherence to EBP in current care by reviewing the inpatient records of surveyed women and identifying practices that were inconsistent with the 10 selected EB recommendations. Mode of birth among participants was also noted in order to identify the proportion who had experienced a caesarean birth.

Step 3: Designing the new care

As only five women's identified needs and requirements were supported by EB clinical recommendations (well-being of woman and baby, vaginal birth, companionship, and low-pain labour), the team radically redesigned maternity care also based on the remaining 15 identified needs and requirements along with the 10 EB clinical recommendations by developing a process flowchart of maternity care. An illustration of just one aspect of the flowchart for the new care model is shown in Figure 1. This demonstrates how the admission process was redesigned based on the selected EB recommendations as well as women's needs and requirements.
Figure 1

The admission process of maternity care in Fayazbakhsh hospital in before (left) and after (right) introduction of the new model of care: In the new model an evidence-based clinical recommendation namely, admission in labour phase, as well as a function including, labour education, have been introduced into the process.

The admission process of maternity care in Fayazbakhsh hospital in before (left) and after (right) introduction of the new model of care: In the new model an evidence-based clinical recommendation namely, admission in labour phase, as well as a function including, labour education, have been introduced into the process. Physicians – 20 obstetricians, 6 anaesthetists and 4 neonatologists (90% of total physicians) – then reviewed the ideal process step-by-step and planned for realistic contingencies [26]. Over a one-month period, the physicians and midwives then participated in training courses and workshops which included EBP and quality improvement methods [27].

Step 4: Implementing and evaluating the new care

Between 20 February and 16 March 2007, satisfaction data were again collected from a random sample of 100 women following the implementation of the new care model. For a period of 25 days, four women were randomly selected from all women who had given birth each day using random numbers generated by a relevant website, and they completed the same questionnaire with the same protocol previously used at baseline. Six initially selected participants who were unable to complete the questionnaire due to literacy problems were each replaced by further random selection form the day's births. One hundred fully completed questionnaires were thus obtained. Differences in women's satisfaction before and after the intervention were assessed using the Mann-Whitney non-parametric test in SPSS 13.0 [28]. The team members again reviewed the inpatient records of participants to identify the level of clinician adherence with the new maternity care model as well as their clinical outcomes (vaginal or caesarean birth). We calculated the relative risk (RR) and 95% confidence interval for caesarean birth in those women for whom the new maternity care model was not followed.

Results

Women's satisfaction

Prior to implementation of the new care model, women's satisfaction with care indicated low to moderate levels of satisfaction (mean < 3.6), on 15 of the 20 items. Statistical comparison of women's satisfaction levels before and after the intervention showed a significant increase in satisfaction for sixteen of the twenty needs and requirements. Just four items showed no significant improvement in women's rating – painless vaginal examination, low-pain labour, short labour and clean maternity ward – all of which had exhibited high levels of satisfaction even before introduction of the new model (Table 4).
Table 4

Women's satisfaction levels assessed before and after introduction of the new model of maternity care

Satisfaction level

BeforeAfter

NoNeeds and requirementsMeanVarianceMeanVarianceP-value (two dimensional) with Mann-Whitney test
1Provision of comfort3.50.774.570.29< 0.0001
2Well-being of woman3.500.664.630.28< 0.0001
3Painless vaginal examination4.410.454.290.630.371
4Vaginal birth2.470.504.411.31< 0.0001
5Companionship after birth2.640.643.502.61< 0.0001
6Listening to the fetal heartbeat3.460.664.850.17< 0.0001
7Immediate opportunity to see the newborn3.540.614.790.34< 0.0001
8Low-pain labour4.370.594.220.490.063
9Quick response to requests3.460.684.500.30< 0.0001
10Helping mother with breastfeeding3.410.654.400.76< 0.0001
11Caring and sensitive staff3.400.614.540.32< 0.0001
12Labour and childbirth education4.300.624.910.10< 0.0001
13Well-being of baby3.300.654.730.24< 0.0001
14Bed linen changed frequently3.500.664.670.22< 0.0001
15Privacy during birth & vaginal examination3.460.634.331.15< 0.0001
16Clean maternity ward4.220.744.540.290.032
17Improved hospital facilities2.780.823.981.64< 0.0001
18Quick admission3.400.874.680.37< 0.0001
19Short labour4.290.804.430.450.536
20Frequent monitoring3.580.564.570.33< 0.0001
Women's satisfaction levels assessed before and after introduction of the new model of maternity care

Clinician adherence to evidence-based care

None of the selected EB practices had been routinely followed before the intervention. After the new care model was introduced, clinicians complied with the new EB guidelines in the care of 78 participants (78%). The EB practice that had most often been missed was the new protocol for admission in labour (68%). In 67% of these instances of non-compliance, women experienced a caesarean birth.

Caesarean birth

Prior to implementation of the new model of care, 42% of participants had a caesarean birth. Following its implementation 30% of women had a caesarean birth. In the 22 women for whom the new care model was not followed, the relative risk of caesarean birth was significantly higher (RR = 3.55, 95% CI: 2.07–6.07) (Table 5).
Table 5

The clinical outcome of clinical adherence to the new care model*

Clinical OutcomeCB**VB***Total% of CB
Non-adherence to the new maternity care model1572268.2
Adherence to the new maternity care model15637819.2

Total307010030

*The relative risk (RR) of caesarean birth is 3.55 (95% CI: 2.07–6.07) among women of clinicians not adhering to the new care model

** Caesarean birth

*** Vaginal birth

The clinical outcome of clinical adherence to the new care model* *The relative risk (RR) of caesarean birth is 3.55 (95% CI: 2.07–6.07) among women of clinicians not adhering to the new care model ** Caesarean birth *** Vaginal birth

Discussion

Implementation of the new maternity care model improved clinician compliance with evidence-based guidelines and was associated with an improvement in women's satisfaction levels and a reduction in rates of caesarean birth. Whilst promising, these findings need to be interpreted cautiously primarily because of limitations for attributing causality in the before-and-after design used here [29]. Thus, although our findings are consistent with those of other recently published studies [15,30,31], the impact of the intervention would be more appropriately studied in a well-designed randomised trial. Whether the method and findings of the study have value in other settings and with other clinical processes will only be seen in future studies. Most of the quality improvement literature emphasises the involvement of people who know the process best (the process owners) as essential for eliciting the best information and for increasing the participation and commitment of quality improvement team members [32]. However there are some limitations. A dual role as caregiver and quality improvement team member can be a source of bias. In Step 1, the purpose of our interviews with women was to develop understanding of patient needs and requirements (not to assess their satisfaction with care). At this stage caregiver involvement was unlikely to introduce bias. However, the involvement of the midwives during the collection of satisfaction data (in Steps 2 and 4) may have been a source of bias in the study. We tried to increase the internal validity of the study through midwife training, assurances to women about the purpose of the study, standardisation of the survey process and supervision of the survey and data analysis by the authors who were external to the quality improvement processes [29]. The identified women's needs and requirements had a major role in design of the new care model. Available EB guidelines alone do not guarantee patient satisfaction or high quality of care. In this study women identified that they did not want support during labour and birth from their partner or a family member, but rather from their professional caregivers. Despite research evidence that supports the role for companionship during birth [33], women's stated preference was for non-professional support from their partners or family members, immediately after the birth. Thus the new model adopted a modified evidence-based guideline appropriate to the expressed wishes of the women attending the study hospital. In addition, professional consensus about areas of practice on which to focus improvement efforts largely ensured adherence to and smooth implementation of the new model of care. Our experience suggests that care designers should always consider all the relevant sources of evidence, including patient needs and requirements and professional consensus, in any EB initiative [34]. It appears that participation and raised awareness among clinicians played an important role in successful implementation of the new care guidelines. However, in around one in five cases compliance with the new model was not achieved. Changing care practices is always a time-consuming and ongoing process requiring much organisational support [35]. Lack of time and experience, conflicts between professional groups and/or generations, cultural and psychosocial characteristics of the community, the physical and technical environment, rights and rules, and fear of poor outcomes may all be barriers to the adoption of EB practices [36]. In our study it was of interest that caesarean birth was more likely to be associated with non-compliance with admission guidelines, that is, women being admitted who were not in active labour, did not have effective contractions and did not respond well to stimulation – a set of circumstances that may predispose to a decision to perform a caesarean. Alternatively, for women who attended hospital late in labour there may simply have been less opportunity for medical intervention.

Conclusion

This multi-faceted intervention to translate appropriate evidence into practice appears to have had an important and positive impact on maternity care provision in the study hospital. Our study has demonstrated both that women are well aware of their needs and that identifying patient needs and requirements can play a major role in designing and measuring quality improvements. Equally, attention to professional consensus about priorities for EB practices appears to improve implementation of new care models and reduce clinician resistance to change. This study may also provide food for thought for health care policy-makers and care providers who are looking for better strategies to bring about evidence-based and patient-centred care.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

SA developed study design, administered the study team at the study hospital, performed data management and interpretation, and drafted the manuscript for publication. FA, AL, KM, RS and MA provided scientific advice on the design and implementation of the study, analysis and interpretation of the data as well as in drafting the manuscript. All authors read and approved the manuscript.

Pre-publication history

The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed here:
  20 in total

Review 1.  Criteria for clinical audit of the quality of hospital-based obstetric care in developing countries.

Authors:  W Graham; P Wagaarachchi; G Penney; A McCaw-Binns; K Y Antwi; M H Hall
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 9.408

2.  Reduced medicolegal risk by compliance with obstetric clinical pathways: a case--control study.

Authors:  Scott B Ransom; David M Studdert; Mitchell P Dombrowski; Michelle M Mello; Troyen A Brennan
Journal:  Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 7.661

3.  Evidence for the effectiveness of techniques To change physician behavior.

Authors:  W R Smith
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2000-08       Impact factor: 9.410

Review 4.  Patient satisfaction: what we know about and what we still need to explore.

Authors:  L Aharony; S Strasser
Journal:  Med Care Rev       Date:  1993

5.  Challenges for the adoption of evidence-based maternity care in Turkey.

Authors:  Janet Molzan Turan; Ayşen Bulut; Hacer Nalbant; Nuriye Ortayli; Tuğrul Erbaydar
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2005-11-14       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 6.  Evidence-based strategies for reducing cesarean section rates: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Nils Chaillet; Alexandre Dumont
Journal:  Birth       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 3.689

7.  Quality improvement methods in clinical medicine.

Authors:  P E Plsek
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  1999-01       Impact factor: 7.124

8.  Decreasing the cesarean section rate in a private hospital: success without mandated clinical changes.

Authors:  D C Lagrew; M A Morgan
Journal:  Am J Obstet Gynecol       Date:  1996-01       Impact factor: 8.661

9.  Patient satisfaction: a valid concept?

Authors:  B Williams
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1994-02       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  Using clinical audit to improve the quality of obstetric care at the Tibetan Delek Hospital in North India: a longitudinal study.

Authors:  Stewart W Mercer; Katherine Sevar; Tsetan D Sadutshan
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2006-06-07       Impact factor: 3.223

View more
  10 in total

1.  Evidence-Based Intrapartum Practice and Associated Factors Among Obstetric Care Providers Working in Public Hospitals of South Wollo Zone North-Central Ethiopia: An Institutional-Based Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Abrham Debeb Sendekie; Mengistu Abate Belay; Sindu Ayalew Yimer; Alemu Degu Ayele
Journal:  Int J Womens Health       Date:  2022-05-19

2.  Developing criteria for cesarean section using the RAND appropriateness method.

Authors:  Rahim Ostovar; Arash Rashidian; Abolghasem Pourreza; Batool Hossein Rashidi; Sedigheh Hantooshzadeh; Hassan Eftekhar Ardebili; Mahmood Mahmoudi
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2010-09-14       Impact factor: 3.007

Review 3.  Determinants of women's satisfaction with maternal health care: a review of literature from developing countries.

Authors:  Aradhana Srivastava; Bilal I Avan; Preety Rajbangshi; Sanghita Bhattacharyya
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2015-04-18       Impact factor: 3.007

4.  Iranian mothers' perception of the psychological birth trauma: A qualitative study.

Authors:  Ziba Taghizadeh; Alireza Irajpour; Saharnaz Nedjat; Mohammad Arbabi; Violeta Lopez
Journal:  Iran J Psychiatry       Date:  2014-03

5.  Adherence to evidence based care practices for childbirth before and after a quality improvement intervention in health facilities of Rajasthan, India.

Authors:  Kirti Iyengar; Motilal Jain; Sunil Thomas; Kalpana Dashora; William Liu; Paramsukh Saini; Rajesh Dattatreya; Indrani Parker; Sharad Iyengar
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 3.007

6.  Effectiveness of the facility-based maternal near-miss case reviews in improving maternal and newborn quality of care in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review.

Authors:  Marzia Lazzerini; Sonia Richardson; Valentina Ciardelli; Anna Erenbourg
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 2.692

7.  Evidence-based health care, past deeds at a glance, challenges and the future prospects in iran.

Authors:  Z Baradaran-Seyed; R Majdzadeh
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2012-12-01       Impact factor: 1.429

Review 8.  A 10 year (2000-2010) systematic review of interventions to improve quality of care in hospitals.

Authors:  Mary C Conry; Niamh Humphries; Karen Morgan; Yvonne McGowan; Anthony Montgomery; Kavita Vedhara; Efharis Panagopoulou; Hannah Mc Gee
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 2.655

Review 9.  Do strategies to improve quality of maternal and child health care in lower and middle income countries lead to improved outcomes? A review of the evidence.

Authors:  Zoe Dettrick; Sonja Firth; Eliana Jimenez Soto
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-12-09       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Success rate evaluation of clinical governance implementation in teaching hospitals in Kerman (Iran) based on nine steps of Karsh's model.

Authors:  Leila Vali; Zahra Mastaneh; Ali Mouseli; Vida Kardanmoghadam; Sodabeh Kamali
Journal:  Electron Physician       Date:  2017-07-25
  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.