| Literature DB >> 31500580 |
Alison James1, Simon Cooper2, Elizabeth Stenhouse3, Ruth Endacott3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the United Kingdom, midwives will engage in discussions with the multidisciplinary team as to whether they can provide Obstetric High Dependency Care (OHDC) on the Delivery Suite or whether a woman's care should be escalated to the critical care team. This study aimed to explore the question: What factors influence midwives to provide OHDC or request care be escalated away from the obstetric unit in hospitals remote from tertiary referral centres?Entities:
Keywords: Escalation of care; Maternal critical care; Obstetric high dependency care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31500580 PMCID: PMC6734275 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-019-2487-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
An overview of the OUs involved in the Focus Group research
| Obstetric Unit | Range of births per annum | Neonatal care facilitiesa | Number of delivery beds | Number of OHDC rooms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| H | 1500–1900 | Special Care Unit (SCU) | 5 | 0 |
| I | 4000–4500 | Local Neonatal Unit (LNU) | 9 | 0, but OHDC equipment available and taken to the bedside |
| J | Approximately 5000 | Neonatal Intensive Care (NICU) | 10 | 1 |
aUK SCUs provide care for neonates who require additional care and possibly some high dependency care, usually around or after 32 weeks gestation. LNUs provide high dependency / short-term intensive care for neonates born around 28–32 weeks gestation. Neonatal intensive care units admit the sickest and most preterm neonates
The key features of the three video vignettes used as triggers for the focus groups
| Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 | Scenario 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical Picture | Postnatal mother with severe pre eclampsia at 30/40 gestation. Vaginal birth 90 min previously. Neonate transferred to neonatal unit | Postnatal mother who has recently had a primary PPH. On-going management in progress after the initial emergency treatment. Neonate with mother. | Woman 32/40 pregnant with comorbidities (type 2 diabetes and ventricular septal defect repaired in infancy). Raised BMI. Admitted with mild chest pain and low oxygen saturations (88–90%) in air. |
| Intravenous magnesium sulphate / intravenous anti- hypertensives in progress | Blood transfusion in progress. | Continuous ECG in progress | |
| Uncontrolled hypertension | CVP line in situ due to poor peripheral access | Requiring 4 L/min oxygen, via face mask to maintain oxygen saturations at 97% | |
| Hyperreflexia, 4 beats of clonus | Hourly CVP readings requested to guide fluid replacement | Stable vital signs whilst patient has oxygen therapy in progress, (but at risk of deterioration) | |
| Headache | Stable pulse and blood pressure. Lochia within normal limits. | Normal CTG, normal fetal movements. | |
| Blood picture shows HELLP syndrome | Reduced urine output | Differential diagnosis of cardiac event or pulmonary embolism | |
| Overall, presents with an unstable clinical picture in view of uncontrolled severe hypertension, blood picture and neurological examination findings. | Overall, relatively stable condition, but requiring CVP monitoring. | Currently stable with oxygen therapy in progress but potential for deterioration | |
| Workload | Moderate. All women on the Delivery Suite are in labour – mainly low risk. | High. All but one of the Delivery Suite rooms are occupied however, anticipated that three women will be transferred home / to the post natal ward in the next hour. | Low to moderate. There are empty rooms, mainly low risk women in labour. |
| Staffing | Correct number and grades of midwives on duty for the maternity unit in question | All band 6 midwives with one band 7 midwife coordinating. One band 6 midwife off sick. | All band 6 midwives (except one newly qualified midwife) on duty with one band 7 midwife coordinating. No staff off sick. |
Key:
CTG Cardiotocograph
ECG Electrocardiogram
CVP Central Venous Pressure
HELLP Haemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets
PPH Post Partum Haemorrhage