Improving the Maternity Care Safety Net: Establishing Maternal Mortality Surveillance for Non-Obstetric Providers and Institutions

Author:

Combellick Joan L.123ORCID,Basile Ibrahim Bridget3ORCID,Esmaeili Aryan4,Phibbs Ciaran S.45,Johnson Amanda M.1,Patton Elizabeth Winston167,Manzo Laura38,Haskell Sally G.129

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Women’s Health, 810 Vermont Ave NW, Washington, DC 20420, USA

2. VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Ave, West Haven, CT 06516, USA

3. School of Nursing, Yale University, 400 West Campus Drive, Orange, CT 06477, USA

4. Health Economics Resource Center (HERC), Palo Alto VA Medical Center, Menlo Park 795 Willow Road, Palo Alto, CA 94025, USA

5. Departments of Pediatrics and Health Policy, Stanford University School of Medicine, 453 Quarry Road, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA

6. VA Boston Health Care System, 150 South Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130, USA

7. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston University, 771 Albany St, Dowling 4, Boston, MA 02118, USA

8. US Army, AMEDD Student Detachment, 187th Medical Battalion, Joint Base San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA

9. School of Medicine, Yale University, 333 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06510, USA

Abstract

The siloed nature of maternity care has been noted as a system-level factor negatively impacting maternal outcomes. Veterans Health Administration (VA) provides multi-specialty healthcare before, during, and after pregnancy but purchases obstetric care from community providers. VA providers may be unaware of perinatal complications, while community-based maternity care providers may be unaware of upstream factors affecting the pregnancy. To optimize maternal outcomes, the VA has initiated a system-level surveillance and review process designed to improve non-obstetric care for veterans experiencing a pregnancy. This quality improvement project aimed to describe the VA-based maternal mortality review process and to report maternal mortality (pregnancy-related death up to 42 days postpartum) and pregnancy-associated mortality (death from any cause up to 1 year postpartum) among veterans who use VA maternity care benefits. Pregnancies and pregnancy-associated deaths between fiscal year (FY) 2011–2020 were identified from national VA databases. All deaths underwent individual chart review and abstraction that focused on multi-specialty care received at the VA in the year prior to pregnancy until the time of death. Thirty-two pregnancy-associated deaths were confirmed among 39,720 pregnancies (PAMR = 80.6 per 100,000 live births). Fifty percent of deaths occurred among individuals who had experienced adverse social determinants of health. Mental health conditions affected 81%. Half (n = 16, 50%) of all deaths occurred in the late postpartum period (43–365 days postpartum) after maternity care had ended. More than half of these late postpartum deaths (n = 9, 56.2%) were related to suicide, homicide, or overdose. Integration of care delivered during the perinatal period (pregnancy through postpartum) from primary, mental health, emergency, and specialty care providers may be enhanced through a system-based approach to pregnancy-associated death surveillance and review. This quality improvement project has implications for all healthcare settings where coordination between obstetric and non-obstetric providers is needed.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference29 articles.

1. Center for Disease Control & Prevention (2023, November 21). Four in 5 Pregnancy-Related Deaths in the U.S. Are Preventable, Available online: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2022/p0919-pregnancy-related-deaths.html.

2. Hoyert, D.L. (2022). Maternal Mortality Rates in the United States, 2020. Report, NCHS Health E-Stats.

3. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2023, September 11). The Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Improve Maternal Health, Available online: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/call-to-action-maternal-health.pdf.

4. National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine (2020). Birth Settings in America: Improving Outcomes, Quality, Access, and Choice, The National Academies Press.

5. Frayne, S.M., Phibbs, C.S., Saechao, F., Friedman, S.A., Shaw, J.G., Romodan, Y., Berg, E., Lee, J., Ananth, L., and Iqbal, S. (2018). Sourcebook: Women Veterans in the Veterans Health Administration. Volume 4: Longitudinal Trends in Sociodemographics, Utilization, Health Profile, and Geographic Distribution, Veterans Health Administration, Department of Veterans Affairs.

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