| Literature DB >> 31023255 |
Susan Crowther1, Emma MacIver2, Annie Lau2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Postnatal care continually attracts less attention than other parts of the childbirth year. Many regions consistently report poor maternal satisfaction with care in the post-birth period. Despite policy recommending post-birth planning be part of maternity services there remains a paucity of empirical evidence and reported experience using post-birth care plans. There is a need to report on post-birth care plans, identify policy and guideline recommendations and gaps in the current empirical research, as well as experiences creating and using post-birth care plans.Entities:
Keywords: Care plans; Continuity; Personalised care; Post-birth; Postnatal
Year: 2019 PMID: 31023255 PMCID: PMC6485080 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-019-2274-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
A Chronological Account of Post-Birth Care Plans in Policy
| Policy document, Author and Year of Publication | Country | Overview and Relevance to Post-Birth Care Planning |
|---|---|---|
| National Service Framework (NSF) for Children, Young People and Maternity Services Department of Health and Social Care 2004 | England | Emphasises the importance of a fully personalised care plan spanning pregnancy, childbirth and the post-birth period, but lacks detail on what this should encompass postnatally. |
| National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), − Postnatal care up to 8 weeks after birth CG 37 NICE 2006 (last updated in 2015) | UK | Introduced the idea of post-birth care plans, stating that |
| Maternity Matters Department of Health 2007 | England | ‘Personalised care plans’ for the antenatal period and birth are mentioned, no specific mention of extending this to the post-birth period. |
| Pathways for Maternity Care NHS Trust March 2009 | Scotland | Reiterates the importance of an individualised care plan as per NICE guidance |
| A Refreshed Framework for Maternity Care in Scotland The Maternity Services Action Group Scottish Government 2011 | Scotland | No explicit reference to PBCP, but states that post-birth care should be delivered in line with national guidelines (including the NICE guidelines). Also, makes a brief reference to ‘maternity care planning’, but does not elaborate on what this entails. |
| Postnatal Care Program Guidelines for Victorian Health Services, State of Victoria’s Department of Health and Human Services 2012 | Australia | Recommends that post-birth care planning starts during the antenatal period and should include the woman’s preferred location and timing of her care. |
| Optimizing Postnatal Care American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) 2016 | USA | Planning for post-birth care should begin during pregnancy by developing a postpartum care plan specific to each woman. |
| National Maternity Review - Better Births NHS 2016 | England | Recommends that all women have a ‘personalised care plan’ for their whole maternity pathway. |
| The Best Start: A Five-Year Forward Plan for Maternity and Neonatal Care in Scotland - Executive Summary Report Scottish Government 2017 | Scotland | Options for post-birth support should be discussed by woman and midwife during pregnancy and the woman’s decisions recorded in a shared personalised care plan, reviewed throughout the maternity journey. |
| Implementing Better Births – a Resource Pack for Local Maternity Services NHS 2017 | England | All women should have a personalised care plan for the whole maternity journey. The post-birth part of the plan should be considered before the birth and revisited throughout. |
PICO analysis for development of the research question
| PICO Headings | Description of Areas Included | |
|---|---|---|
| P | Participants | Pregnant women (and their partners/ families), midwives |
| I | Intervention | PBCP |
| C | Context | Middle-to high income countries, English-speaking; countries with a maternity-care infrastructure, 2006 – present day to reflect the initial guidelines issued by NICE regarding the need for post-birth care planning |
| O | Outcome | Women’s satisfaction with their post-birth care. Women being involved in decisions about their own care and their baby’s care. Provides an opportunity for women to identify and predict their own post-birth care needs |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram
Evidence Concerning Use of Post-Birth Care Plans
| Document, Author and Year | Location | Method and Participants | Main aims/ objectives/purpose | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left to your own devices: The postnatal care experiences of 1260 first-time Mothers Newburn and Bhavnani, (NCT) 2010 | UK | Findings of a survey carried out with 1260 first-time mothers - largely NCT members - who had given birth to their first baby during 2008–2009. | To investigate the post-birth experiences of women, the quality of support in the first few weeks after giving birth. Considered the extent to which the NICE recommendations on the use of individualised post-birth care plans had been implemented. | 96% of women stated that they had not been not involved in developing a post-birth care plan as recommended by NICE. |
| Pressure Points Campaign – ‘Postnatal Care Planning’ Royal College of Midwives (RCM) 2014 | UK | In 2013, the RCM surveyed midwives, maternity support workers and student midwife members from across the UK. They also asked women for their experiences of post-birth care. | To investigate the extent to which post-birth care plans are used, barriers to use and experiences, from the perspective of women and professionals. | There’s a significant gap between what women should be receiving in terms of post-birth care planning and what they are getting. Almost half of the women could not recall discussing a post-birth care plan before the birth and 2/3 had not discussed it afterwards. A lack of resources and lack of professional awareness of the NICE guidance was identified as the main reasons for this. Reiterates the importance of continuity of care and individualised care. |
| Safely delivered – a national survey of women’s experience of maternity care 2014 | England | Based on a survey of 4571 women, who gave birth during a 2 week period in 2014. | Set out to investigate women’s experiences of their maternity care, including post-birth care. | The participants were not asked whether they had completed a post-birth care plan. Consideration of individualised care and continuity of carer. |
| Individualised, flexible postnatal care: a feasibility study for a randomised controlled trial Forster, D. et al. 2014 | Australia | 109 women approached during pregnancy, were sent a postal survey 8 weeks after giving birth, completed by 67. | The study refers to ‘planning in the antenatal period for postnatal care’ and a ‘postnatal care plan’, but the investigation is concerned solely with a new proposed model relating to early hospital discharge. | Most women ( |
| Having a baby in Scotland 2015: listening to mothers An Official Statistics publication for Scotland Scottish Government 2015 | Scotland | Survey of 2000 women who gave birth during February and March 2015. | The aim of the study was to provide a benchmark for improvement in maternity services and inform a major review of maternity services in Scotland. Very similar to the CQC survey in England. | The survey failed to directly ask women whether they had completed a post-birth care plan. |
| A Survey of Women’s Experiences of Maternity Care in Northern Ireland National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU) and the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Queen’s University 2016 | Northern Ireland | Details the experiences of 2722 women who gave birth between October 2014 and December 2016. | Set out to uncover women’s experiences of maternity care in Northern Ireland. | There was no question posed around post-birth care plans or broader maternity care planning. |
| Support Overdue: women’s experiences of maternity services National Childbirth Trust (NCT) and National Federation of Women’s Institutes (NFWI) 2017 | UK | Survey of 2500 women who gave birth in England or Wales in 2014, 2015, and 2016. | The study set out to investigate women’s experiences of maternity services. | States that the NCT endorse the NICE guidelines around developing a post-birth care plan, yet there is no specific question asking whether the women had developed a plan or what it contained. |
| A systematic approach towards the development of quality indicators for postnatal care after discharge in Flanders, Belgium Helsloot, et al. 2017 | Belguim | Involved health care professionals, representatives of health care organisations and policy makers with expertise in the field of post-birth care. | Set out to develop a set of quality indicators for post-birth care after hospital discharge, to monitor and improve care provision. | Identified a range of ‘quality indicators’. |
| Your Birth We Care – a survey exploring women’s experiences in pregnancy and birth in Wales | Wales | The survey was completed by 3968 mothers from all over Wales. | It aimed to understand the perception of women about the quality of antenatal care and the capacity of the service to prepare women for labour, birth and also parenting. | As this survey was primarily concerned with pregnancy and birth, there was limited mention of post-birth care and needs and no discussion of care planning for either the post-birth period or any other part of the maternity journey. |
| Survey of women’s experiences of maternity care | England | Large-scale maternity survey based on responses from 18,426 women who gave birth during January–February 2017. | It aimed to uncover women’s experiences of their care during labour and birth, as well as the quality of antenatal and post-birth support. | Refers to the NICE guidelines on developing a post-birth care plan, but does not ask women whether they had had the opportunity to develop a plan. |
| Planning for your Postnatal Care Needs | England | An initial consultation with women from the North-West London area. Development of a postnatal care plan tool in line with the NICE guidelines. Subsequent pilot phase and evaluation of this tool by 27 women and 4 midwives via a survey and several others in small focus groups, resulting in the reworking of the tool and development of a maternity care planner. | Setout to develop ways in which local post-birth care service provision could be improved, in terms of information needs, and promoting continuity of care and personalised care. | In terms of the findings: the majority of the women felt that the plan: had been introduced at the right time; had helped to prepare for post-birth needs, requires to be addressed through face-to-face conversations with their midwife. |
Broad Themes Across the Various Policy and Research Papers
| Publications | Positioning of PBCP in policy | Content and approach | Personalised care and relational continuity | Feasibility and acceptability in practice |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Service Framework (NSF) for Children, Young People and Maternity Services (2004, UK) | √ | √ | ||
| National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), NICE Clinical Guidelines, No 37 (2006 - last updated in 2015, UK) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Maternity Matters, Department of Health (2007, England) | √ | |||
| Pathways for Maternity Care NHS Trust (2009, Scotland) | √ | √ | ||
| Newburn and Bhavnani, (NCT) Left to your own devices: The Postnatal Care Experiences of 1260 first-time Mothers (2010, UK) | √ | √ | ||
| A Refreshed Framework for Maternity Care in Scotland (The Scottish Government) (2011, Scotland) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Postnatal Care Program Guidelines for Victorian Health Services, from State of Victoria’s Department of Health and Human Services (2012, Australia) | √ | √ | ||
| Royal College of Midwives (RCM), Pressure Points Campaign – Postnatal Care Planning (2014, UK) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Redshaw, M. & Henderson, J. (NPEU) Safely Delivered – a national survey of women’s experience of maternity care (2014, England) | √ | |||
| Forster, D. et al, Individualised, flexible postnatal care: a feasibility study for a randomised controlled trial (2014, Australia) | √ | √ | √ | |
| The Scottish Government, Having a baby in Scotland | √ | |||
| American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (ACOG) (2016, USA) | √ | √ | ||
| NPEU and Queen’s University, A Survey of Women’s Experiences of Maternity Care in Northern Ireland (2016, Northern Ireland) | √ | |||
| National Maternity Review - Better Births (2016, England) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Implementing Better Births – a Resource Pack for Local Maternity Services (2017, England) | √ | √ | √ | |
| National Childbirth Trust (NCT) and National Federation of Women’s Institutes (NFWI), Support Overdue: women’s experiences of maternity services (2017, UK) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Welsh Government, Your Birth We Care – a survey exploring women’s experiences in pregnancy and birth in Wales (2017, Wales) | √ | |||
| The Best Start: A Five-Year Forward Plan for Maternity and Neonatal Care in Scotland - Executive Summary Report, The Scottish Government (2017, Scotland) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Helsloot, et al. A systematic approach towards the development of quality indicators for postnatal care after discharge in Flanders, Belgium (2017, Belgium) | √ | √ | √ | |
| Care Quality Commission, Survey of women’s experiences of maternity care (2018, England) | √ | √ | ||
| North-West London STP, Personalised Post-Natal Care Plan, Evaluation and Personal Care Plans for Mums and Families (2018, England) | √ | √ | √ | √ |