Factors influencing referral to maternity models of care in Australian general practice

Author:

Thomas JORCID,Kuliukas LORCID,Frayne J,Bradfield ZORCID

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn the Australian maternity system, general practitioners play a vital role in advising and directing prospective parents to maternity models of care. Optimising model of care discussions and the decision-making process avoids misaligning women with over or under specialised care, reduces the potential for disruptive care transitions and unnecessary healthcare costs, and is critical in ensuring consumer satisfaction. Current literature overwhelmingly focusses on women’s decision-making around model of care discussions and neglects the gatekeeping role of the General Practitioner (GP). This study aimed to explore and describe the factors influencing Australian GPs decision-making when referring pregnant women to maternity models of care.MethodsThis study used a qualitative descriptive approach. General practitioners (N=12) with experience referring women to maternity models of care in Australia participated in a semi-structured interview. Interviews occurred between October and November 2021 by telephone or videoconference. Reflexive thematic analysis was facilitated by NVivo-12 data management software to codify and interpret themes from the data.FindingsTwo broad themes were interpreted from the data. The first theme entitled ‘GP Factors’, incorporated three associated sub-themes including ‘GPs Previous Model of Care Experience’, ‘Gaps in GP Knowledge’ and ‘GP Perception of Models of Care’. The second theme, entitled ‘Woman’s Factors’, encapsulated two associated sub-themes including the ‘Woman’s Preferences’ and ‘Access to Models’.ConclusionsThis study provides novel evidence regarding general practitioner perspectives of the factors influencing model of care decision-making and referral. The exploration and description of factors influencing model of care decisions provide unique insight into the ways that all stakeholders can experience access to a broader range of models of care including midwifery-led continuity of care models aligned with consumer-demand. In addition, the role of national primary health networks is outlined as a means to achieving this.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference55 articles.

1. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Maternity models of care in Australia, 2022. Canberra: 2022. Cat. no: PER 118.

2. A scoping review of evidence comparing models of maternity care in Australia

3. Commonwealth of Australia. The Australian health system 2022. Available from: https://www.health.gov.au/about-us/the-australian-health-system.

4. Department of Health. Clinical practice guidelines: Pregnancy care. Canberra: Australian Government 2019.

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