| Literature DB >> 33262186 |
Lisa Hinton1, James Hodgkinson2, Katherine L Tucker3, Linda Rozmovits4, Lucy Chappell5, Sheila Greenfield2, Christine McCourt6, Jane Sandall7, Richard J McManus3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: One in 20 women are affected by pre-eclampsia, a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity, death and premature birth worldwide. Diagnosis is made from monitoring blood pressure (BP) and urine and symptoms at antenatal visits after 20 weeks of pregnancy. There are no randomised data from contemporary trials to guide the efficacy of self-monitoring of BP (SMBP) in pregnancy. We explored the perspectives of maternity staff to understand the context and health system challenges to introducing and implementing SMBP in maternity care, ahead of undertaking a trial.Entities:
Keywords: hypertension; maternal medicine; organisation of health services; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262186 PMCID: PMC7709507 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Study sample
| Hospital | Focus group | Numbers | Staff represented |
| Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust | Focus group 1 | 10 | Obstetricians, midwives, pharmacist |
| Focus group 2 | 4 | Day assessment unit midwives | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| West Middlesex University Hospital, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust | Focus group 1 | 3 | Midwives |
| Focus group 2 | 4 | Midwives | |
| Focus group 3 | 5 | Midwives and obstetrician | |
| Focus group 4 | 3 | Midwives | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| Whipps Cross Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust | Focus group 1 | 11 | Obstetricians, midwives |
| Focus group 2 | 4 | Antenatal midwives | |
| Focus group 3 | 4 | Day assessment unit midwives | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| The Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust | Focus group 1 | 6 | Community midwives (FMU) |
| Focus group 2 | 4 | Community midwives (in hospital) | |
| Interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| Focus group 3 | 7 | Antenatal midwives | |
| Focus group 4 | 2 | Medical trainees | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust | Focus group 1 | 11 | Community midwives (in hospital) |
| Focus group 2 | 3 | Obstetricians | |
| Interview | 1 | Obstetrician | |
| Interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| Interview | 1 | Obstetrician | |
| Focus group 3 | 2 | Hospital midwives (MAU) | |
| Interview | 1 | Hospital midwife (MAU) | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant Obstetrician | |
| Horton General Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust | Focus group 4 | 13 | Community midwives |
| Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust | Focus group 1 | 2 | Hospital midwives |
| Focus group 2 | 2 | Hospital midwives | |
| Interview | 1 | Hospital midwife | |
| Focus group 3 | 2 | Obstetricians | |
| Interview | 1 | Obstetrician | |
| Focus group 4 | 6 | Community midwives (in hospital) | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust | Focus group 1 | 3 | Obstetricians |
| Focus group 2 | 2 | Hospital midwives | |
| Focus group 3 | 10 | Hospital and community midwives | |
| Focus group 4 | 8 | Hospital and community midwives | |
| Interview | 1 | Hospital midwife | |
| PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician | |
| Birmingham Women’s Hospital, Birmingham Women's and Children's NHS Foundation Trust | PI interview | 1 | Consultant obstetrician |
FMU, free-standing midwifery unit; MAU, maternity assessment unit; NHS, National Health Service; PI, principal investigator.
Quotations
| Theme | Quotations |
| i)Interpreting BP changes in pregnancy | |
| ‘Another thing outside of pregnancy and not, most of what you’ll doing with hypertension monitoring is trying to prevent long term complications on a short term and therefore, actually what you, slightly over 24 hours probably is what really matters whereas in pregnancy [….] I’m actually only interested in whether or not they’ve got […] Well actually I’m really interested in the next 24 hours.’ | |
| ‘I think that they’re over checking their blood pressure and occasionally I think it is helpful that they see a midwife and do things like check the protein in the urine and things like that which, you know, occasionally perhaps not be able to manage quite so well yourself’ | |
| ‘So you kind of think oh are we only doing half of a job if they’re just monitoring their blood pressure’ | |
| ii) Reliability and accuracy | ‘As a health professional I know blood pressure’s affected by many things, whether you are taking it standing whether you are taking it lying whether it’s in the morning whether you, or you’ve just come back from Tesco with plastic bags and stuff like, you’re out of your breath or you’ve just fought with your partner or something like that, so many things influences blood pressure. So they will need to be given the empowerment they will need to take their blood pressure so that we, it’s as accurate as, so that we get as close to the normal if that can be achieved, something like that.’ |
| ‘I wouldn’t ignore it if it was very elevated but I would certainly repeat it, I wouldn’t go with what they said… Because I’d be worried about the quality of their machine’ | |
| ‘We advise them not to because [um] they’re not calibrated, you know, they’re their own there’s no way they’re calibrated and also quite a lot of [um] blood pressure [um] equipment, we’ve read research that says it’s not as accurate as manual or a professional taking the blood pressure’ | |
| ‘When they come along and they bring readings [um] and they, if there’s any conflict and sometimes they don’t want to be labelled as hypertensive because it leads to certain choices later on in pregnancy that may be removed from them i.e. where they deliver, how they deliver [um] I then, you know, I will talk to them and say you, whatever you’re using at home may or may not be validated for pregnancy but what we use here is validated for pregnancy and therefore I would defer to those readings’ | |
| ‘I tend to be a little bit sceptical because you don’t know what they’re using, you don’t know what machine they’re using, you don’t know whether they’re trained to use it, you don’t know how old that machine is whether it’s again cuff size, you know, if they’ve borrowed it off somebody you don’t know whether it’s been PAT tested, you know, and if they are concerned about their reading being particularly high or particularly low I’d rather just get them in to see the relevant person at the time rather than rely on that, you know, I do worry about them using their own equipment because you just don’t know how accurate it is’ | |
| iii) Impact on women | ‘So for the women who have had severe pre-eclampsia in the past who are absolutely panic stricken about it being missed in the future [……] I don’t know scientifically if it matters but for them it gives them huge reassurance that they’ve got, it means that rather than them having to see the clinician every week or twice a week, they’re doing something, it’s rather like feeding a baby every other day.’ |
| ‘There’s a lot of women that have mildly raised blood pressure that are fine, that we don’t really do anything with. [Um] and it’s a lot of monitoring for them’ | |
| ‘Some women might not want to monitor themselves because they wouldn’t feel, it will be too much responsibility in case they miss something’ | |
| ‘I think it’s a bit of mix isn’t it, I think some women would really like it saves them time especially if they’re busy they have other children.’ | |
| ‘I think a lot of women would also appreciate it because they often don’t want to come into hospital and they would, I think if they were self-monitoring at home if they’re taught in the right way and they know when somethings high or they know when to escalate or to ring and I think it will work really well and stop a lot of people coming in unnecessarily. I think it would be really good’ | |
| iv) Anticipated impact on the antenatal care | ‘We are so busy, we are too busy in hospitals and the more we can do out of hospital safely the better’ |
| ‘There are benefits all-round aren’t there, if you’re, if we’re [um] happy that this woman is monitoring her blood pressure sensibly [um] it’s got benefits for her in that it means she doesn’t have to come so often, it’s got benefits for us in that it reduces our, our workload, surely it’s got, it has a, there’s an economic benefit there for the NHS [um] as a whole and it, I suppose that’s one of the things isn’t it that public health it’s about educating people isn’t it about, so that, you know, I think there are lots of benefits it’s [um] it’s just getting it in place. And being confident about the thing that you’ve got in place’ | |
| ‘I think it would have the potential to increase the appointments rather than decrease appointments as a screening tool for hypertension because of the worried well who’ve seen systolic increase in ten as an example but I don’t think it will decrease the routine ante-natal screening because that has many other roles including measurement of fundal height or foetal wellbeing.’ | |
| ‘I suppose potentially it will increase workload because people are going to recognise that they have a slightly elevated blood pressure sooner but I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing’ | |
| ‘So it’s a massive information imparting exercise probably more importantly than the, the systematic screening for obstetric complications that old fashioned people think of as ante-natal care. You know I, you know, again when I trained we’d see clinics of 40 people, 50 people in a morning where literally all you do would be check their blood pressure, check their urine, put your hand on their tummy, check their heart, you know, see if the patients still breathing, next, you know. But it isn’t like that now there’s a lot more education, seeing much more as a health education exercise as much as a screening for abnormality of pregnancy exercise.’ | |
| v) Caution, uncertainty and evidence | |
| ‘If I look at it and I can see that yes at 2:00 ‘o’ clock and half two she had raised blood pressure but [….] guidelines about what I do about that [um] all I can do is do my own blood pressure readings and get them reviewed by the doctor. Unless there was like a real, you know, like a guideline of what we actually do about the trends, there’s not much I myself could actually do from it.’ | |
| ‘You can also have high blood pressure at home and lower blood pressure readings in hospital and we have no idea, I don’t think [um] what we should do when actually readings are different in different places and there is a tendency, there will be some people who will have a tendency to treat anybody whatever the excuse, much more common is a tendency to say oh it’s probably more, we’ve had 150, 140, 120 I’m going to believe the normal whether its home reading or hospital readings. And so just having more data may just be making more noise rather than giving us, telling us what to do. But without the data we don’t even know if that’s true.’ | |
| ‘Supposed to be evidence based and when you actually look at them about 90% of the recommendations they make are expert opinion’ | |
| vi) Concerns over action/inaction | ‘Yes exactly and they may not realise the seriousness of it, so that would be my concern if they’re doing it at home. The chronic hypertension women have a lot of contact with, in hypertension clinic they understand blood pressure they’ve been dealing with it, they’re on medication they understand something about blood pressure, they might not fully understand how serious it can be with regards to pre-eclampsia but they certainly understand that they need to act on it and if they don’t, obviously it’s explained to them numerous times. My concern is if you did that to a general population will that message be translated.’ |
| ‘I do have a worry about women taking, you know, something like pre-eclampsia is a multi-system disorder, blood pressure is one component and we see every week, every month women who come in with normal blood pressure but everything else going wrong and it would make me nervous about the idea of women taking control of their care so much so that they felt reassured by one reading and ignored their signs and symptoms and I think that, that will be, that’s a major, that’s a clinical worry that I have for using.’ | |
| ‘I think as long as they [women] understand the limits of what’s normal and what’s not and they know the right people to contact if not, then I don’t see there’s anything wrong with it’ | |
| ‘I just know that for some women they, they’ve got so much going on that actually their health is, is quite easily overlooked and [um] is last on the agenda if that makes sense and if they could miss a blood pressure reading here and there [um] then they may well do that and that would be my only [um] and which I feel awful saying really because I am so like passionate about actually women being responsible for their own care and taking ownership of it and us giving it back to them [um]. [……] I just think some women will be like oh yes, everything’s fine they’re all okay and maybe overlook things. I know you’ve got the opposite extent where some people would potentially act on it like say there’s a higher reading because they think it will be acted on and that sort of thing as well but I think you could almost get women who will either pretend they’ve done it or pretend that it’s an okay reading when it’s not [um] which is awful to say that we don’t trust women but’ |