| Literature DB >> 26783742 |
Sonja Melman1, Ellen C N Schoorel1, Karin de Boer2, Henriëtte Burggraaf3, Jan B Derks4, Det van Dijk5, Jeroen van Dillen6, Carmen D Dirksen7, Johannes J Duvekot8, Arie Franx4, Tom H M Hasaart9, Anjoke J M Huisjes10, Diny Kolkman11, Sander van Kuijk12, Anneke Kwee4, Ben W Mol13, Mariëlle G van Pampus14, Alieke de Roon-Immerzeel11, Jos J M van Roosmalen5, Frans J M E Roumen15, Ellen Smid-Koopman16, Luc Smits12, Wilbert A Spaans17, Harry Visser18, Wim J van Wijngaarden19, Christine Willekes1, Maurice G A J Wouters20, Jan G Nijhuis1, Rosella P M G Hermens21, Hubertina C J Scheepers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is an ongoing discussion on the rising CS rate worldwide. Suboptimal guideline adherence may be an important contributor to this rise. Before improvement of care can be established, optimal CS care in different settings has to be defined. This study aimed to develop and measure quality indicators to determine guideline adherence and identify target groups for improvement of care with direct effect on caesarean section (CS) rates.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26783742 PMCID: PMC4718610 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145771
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Stepwise procedure of CS quality indicator development.
Set of CS quality indicators.
| 1. Twin pregnancy and first child cephalic position |
| 2. Fetal macrosomia (<4.5kg in maternal diabetes, <5kg no maternal diabetes) |
| 3. Preterm labor, cephalic position |
| 4. Small for gestational age without fetal distress |
| 5. Previous shoulder dystocia without impaired perinatal outcome |
| 6. Position of the placenta at 1-2cm of the internal os |
| Request for CS without medical grounds: |
| 7. Explore reason for request |
| 8. Discuss (dis)advantages to CS delivery |
| 9. In case of extreme fear: offer psychological counselling |
| 10. Preterm breech delivery (frank, complete breech) |
| 11. Breech presentation at term |
| Previous CS (Inform on risks and chance for successful VBAC) |
| 12. Inform on low risk of uterine rupture |
| 13. Inform on high chance of successful VBAC |
| 14. Inform on increased risk and lower success rate in case of need for labor induction |
| 15. Offer external cephalic version in case of non-cephalic position |
| 16. Use of internal audit on CS |
| 17. In case of suspected fetal distress use STAN (ST analysis) or micro blood analysis |
| In case of non-progressive labor first stage: |
| 18. Rupture of membranes, |
| 19. Urinary catheterization, |
| 20. Use of pain medication, preferably epidural analgesia, |
| 21. Adequate contractions or augmentation of labor |
| In case of non-progressive labor second stage in nulliparous women: |
| 22. Active pushing recommended, |
| 23. Adequate contractions recommended, |
| 24. Consider vacuum extraction if the head is <1/5th palpable per abdomen |
| 25. Continuous support during labor for women with or without prior training |
| 26. Use of partogram |
| 27. Involvement of consultant obstetrician in decision making for CS |
Quality of care measured by CS quality indicator.
| Twin pregnancy and first child cephalic position | 1.3% | 16% |
| Fetal macrosomia (<4.5kg in maternal diabetes, <5kg no maternal diabetes) | 4.3% | 33% |
| Preterm labour, cephalic position | 4.7% | 45% |
| Small for gestational age without fetal distress | 3.3% | 43% |
| Previous shoulder dystocia without impaired perinatal outcome | 1.1% | 22% |
| Position of the placenta at 1-2cm of the internal os | 0.02% | 100% |
| Request for CS without medical grounds: | 1% | |
| Explore reason for request | 80% | |
| Discuss (dis)advantages to CS delivery | 66% | |
| In case of extreme fear: offer psychological counseling | 62% | |
| Preterm breech delivery (frank, complete breech) | 1.7% | 1.3% |
| Breech presentation at term | 4.1% | 56% |
| Previous CS (Inform on risks and chance for successful VBAC): | 11.7% | 4% |
| Previous CS and medical reason for induction of labour (inform on risks and chance for successful VBAC) | 2.2% | 18% |
| Offer external cephalic version in case of non-cephalic position | 6% | 77% |
| In case of suspected fetal distress use STAN (ST analysis) or micro blood analysis | 16.9% | 46% |
| In case of non-progressive labor first stage: | 11.1% | |
| Rupture of membranes, | 95% | |
| Urinary catheterization, | 61% | |
| Use of pain medication | 78% | |
| Use of pain medication: epidural analgesia, | 49% | |
| Adequate contractions recommended | 93% | |
| Before performing a CS, an optimal situation (A-E)>2hrs | 23% | |
| Before performing a CS, an optimal situation (A-E)>4hrs | 15% | |
| In case of non-progressive labor second stage in nulliparous women: | 12.7% | |
| Active pushing recommended, | 98% | |
| Adequate contractions recommended, | 72% | |
| Consider vacuum extraction if the head is < 1/5th palpable per abdomen | 45% | |
| Continuous support during labor for women with or without prior training | 88.3% | 37% |
| Use of partogram | 6.9% | 54% |