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Interventions to reduce maternal deaths in New Zealand. Professor Julie Quinlivan University of Notre Dame Australia University of Adelaide Women’s and Children’s Research Institute Ramsay HealthCare, Joondalup Health Campus. Acknowledgements.
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Interventions to reduce maternal deaths in New Zealand Professor Julie Quinlivan University of Notre Dame Australia University of Adelaide Women’s and Children’s Research Institute Ramsay HealthCare, Joondalup Health Campus
Acknowledgements • Perinatal and Maternal Mortality Review Committee • Chair, Professor Cynthia Farquhar • Health Quality and Safety Commission New Zealand.
Maternal deaths What are potentially avoidable factors ? What evidence is there to help?
C0incidential maternal deaths • In the five years from 2006-2010 eight mothers died of coincidental causes. • All deaths occurred in the community. • Six due to MVA • One due to cancer • One due to an accident • Four deaths found to be potentially avoidable due to not wearing a seat belt whilst a passenger in a motor vehicle.
Risk Associations • Fourth or higher order birth • Overweight or obese • Smoking, drug and alcohol abuse • Age over 40 years • Maori or Pacific mothers • Domestic violence and mental illness
Potentially avoidable deaths • 32% of all maternal deaths were potentially avoidable deaths
Avoidable contributory factors • Organizational • Personnel • Technology • Environmental • Barrier to care
Staffing education/behaviour • Lack of policies/protocols/guidelines (N=14) • Lack of recognition of complexity or seriousness of condition (N=8) • Knowledge and skills of staff were lacking (N=8) • Inadequate training/education (N=6) • Delayed emergency response by staff (N=5) • Failure to seek help/supervision (N=3) • Failure to follow recommended best practice (N=2)
Barriers to Care – Patient • No or infrequent antenatal care or late booking • Family violence • Mental illness
Discussion points Staff training in O&G (talk 1) Evidence base behind non engagement with care Domestic violence Mental illness
Patient engagement with care 1 • Travel – longer travel time to the center associated with reduced number of referrals for eligible women, but once they attend, no difference in default rates • Astell-Burt T, Flowerdew R, Boyle P, Dillon J. Soc Sci Med 2012; 75(1): 240-7
Patient engagement with care 2 • Advice given – If patients are uncomfortable or do not understand the reasons behind advice given, they are more likely to default from care than attend and explain why they did not follow advice. • Cartwright B, Holloway D, Grace J et al. Obstet Gynaecol 2012; 32(4): 357-61
Patient engagement with care 3 • Ethnicity – There are genuine ethnic differences in attendance for care that cannot be explained by simple socioeconomic status, geography and severity of illness • Bansal N, Bhopal RS, Steiner MF et al. Br J Cancer 2012; 106(8): 1361-6
Patient engagement with care 4 • Care giver advice -Incentives to attend for care are greater levels of patient knowledge, a sense of duty and fear. The main disincentives to attend for care is the absence of a strong recommendation that care is beneficial by a healthcare provider. • Cartwright B, Holloway D, Grace J et al. Obstet Gynaecol 2012; 32(4): 357-61
Patient engagement with care 5 • Administrative factors – women defaulting from care stated that they were unaware of the appointment date and time, were confused about need to attend or forgot the appointment. • Wilkinson J, Daly M. J Prim Health Care 2012; 4(1): 39-44
Patient engagement with care 6 • Domestic violence and housing instability– In multivariate analysis following 500+ women across three years, the only independent variables associated with persistent default and eventual loss to follow up in O&G clinics were domestic violence and housing instability • Quinlivan Jet al.. J Low Gen Tract Dis 2012; doi; 10.1097/LGT.Ob013e3182480c2e • Collier R, Petersen RW, Quinlivan J Arch Wom Ment Health 2012 (in press); Paper to be presented at ASPOG ASM Melb August 2012
You need to know your local factors for disengagement with care.
Domestic violence 1 • Common in the reproductive years • NZ lifetime prevalence 33-39% • Severe 19-23% • Experienced annually 5% • Women exposed to domestic violence present for care • Women do not mind being screened in healthcare settings • Fanslow J, Robinson E. NZ Med J 2004; 117: 1206 • Violence Intervention program 2011 http//www.aut.ac.nz/_data/assets/pdf_file/0020/235640/ITRC-SUMMARY-FINAL-2011-WEB.pdf
Domestic violence 2 • With the exception of psychopathic domestic violence, the precipitating event is frequently excessive use of alcohol and drugs. • Need to screen to identify • Need to refer for intervention once identified • Quinlivan JA. Where should research now be focussed in domestic violence and alcohol. International Journal of Substance Use. Commentary 2001; 6: 248-50.
Family Violence and NZ Maternal Deaths Family violence data only available in 40% of cases, but where available, was involved in 24% of cases • Six of these eight women died from suicide.
Family Violence and NZ Maternal Deaths All District Health Boards required to screen for domestic abuse However, only 82% of NZ Hospitals monitor partner abuse screening, Only 22% of these achieve screening rates >50%
Poor history taking • There is poor history taking in relation to mental illness in obstetric histories. • Often bipolar disorders and major psychotic disorders are mislabeled as ‘depression’ • Anxiety disorders are also missed • Chessick CA, Dimidjian Arch Womens Ment Health 2010; 13: 233-248
Screening tools • Improve rates of disease detection. • Need to rescreen in each pregnancy as sufficient variation between pregnancies to justify this. • EPDS only screens for depression • La Porte LM, Kim JJ, Adams M et al. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2012; 206(3): 261-4 • Leddy MA, Lawrence H, Schulkin J Obstet Gynecol Surv 2011; 66(5): 316-23
Must be an entire program • Good history taking for mental illness and screening tools • A network of providers to accommodate screen positive referrals • 24/7 hotline appropriately staffed • Midwifery and obstetrician education • Centralized scoring and referral process • Take care to ensure private providers implement policies • Intensive therapy must be available for those identified as requiring this input • Gordon TE, Cardone IA, Kim JJ. Obstet Gynecol 2006; 107(2 Pt1): 342-7
The Suicide profile • Based on a review of 46 published articles on obstetric suicide. • Risk factors: • current or past history of psychiatric disorder, young (<20 years), unmarried, unemployed, unplanned pregnancy, illicit drug use, alcohol use in pregnancy, low supports, previous sexual or physical violence. • Gentile S, J Inj Violence Res 2011; 3(2): 90-7
You need to screen for domestic violence and mental illness and act on the findings