| Literature DB >> 30134882 |
John Bowers1, Helen Cheyne2, Gillian Mould3, Martin Miller3, Miranda Page2, Fiona Harris2, Debra Bick4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many healthcare services are under considerable pressure to reduce costs while improving quality. This is particularly true in the United Kingdom's National Health Service where postnatal care is sometimes viewed as having a low priority. There is much debate about the service's redesign and the reallocation of resources, both along care pathways and between groups of mothers and babies with different needs. The aim of this study was to develop a decision support tool that would encourage a systemic approach to service redesign and that could assess the various quality and financial implications of service change options making the consequent trade-offs explicit. The paper describes the development process and an initial implementation as a preliminary exploration of the possible merits of this approach.Entities:
Keywords: Care quality; Cost savings; Maternity services; Multicriteria decision analysis; Postnatal care; Priority setting; Program budgeting and marginal analysis; Resource allocation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30134882 PMCID: PMC6106921 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3430-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1The PRAM process: assembling data and assessing options
Specifying demand and staffing for hospital-based postnatal care for different care categories (see Table 1 for definitions of care categories)
Specifying demand, pathways and staffing for community-based postnatal care (see Table 1 for definitions of care categories)
Defining the care categories
| Category | Definition |
|---|---|
| 0a | Routine care plus parenting support for healthy mother and baby but lacking parenting/ feeding skill or confidence. |
| 0b | Routine care plus parenting support for healthy mother and baby but lacking parenting/ feeding skill or confidence. |
| 1 | Additional care for mother and /or baby with some medical, mental health and /or social needs. |
| 2 | Additional care with liaison with other services to meet complex health or social needs. |
| 3 | Intensive additional care with liaison with other services to address serious, complex health or social needs. Given the very low numbers in this category they were subsumed into a joint category 2&3. |
Interpreting the quality domains in postnatal care
| Domain | Interpretation in postnatal care | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Safe | Avoidance of care associated harms; care not delivered as planned, inconsistent or variable care | 0.50 |
| Effective | Supporting recovery from birth and physical health & mental well being for mothers & babies | 0.30 |
| supporting development of confidence in parenting | ||
| Timely | Information provided at the appropriate stage to support parents, e.g. infant-feeding to encourage good practice from an early stage | 0.05 |
| Equitable | Equal access to care, e.g. regardless of physical ability or geography | 0.05 |
| Person-centred | Individual care plans reflecting the mother & baby’s needs, e.g. home/clinic visits designed around mothers’ preferences | 0.10 |
Fig. 2Comparing scores for each quality domain of option a (current provision) and b (a redesigned service)
Fig. 3Comparing the costs and aggregate quality scores of options a (current provision) and b (a redesigned service)
Fig. 4Sensitivity analysis exploring the effects of variations in the weightings of selected quality domains on the improvement in the aggregate quality scores