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Delivering Quality and Value Focus on: Caesarean Section Introduction This document aims to help local health communities and organisations improve the quality and value of care for promoting normal outcomes in maternity care and reducing Caesarean section rates to a safe minimum. It is one of a series of documents produced by the Delivering Quality and Value team at the NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement as part of the high volume Healthcare Resource Groups (HRG) programme. Figure 1 Healthcare Resource Groups (HRGs) Cumulative % FCEs by HRG for England (2003/04) 100 HRGs are groups of clinically similar activities for which a similar quantity of resources is needed. They are also the basis for the NHS Payment by Results system. 90 80 70 60 % 50 40 30 20 10 0 HRG Source Hospital Episode Statistics 50 HRGs account for 50% of all bed days. 50 different HRGs (however, there is overlap) account for 50% of all finished consultant episodes (FCEs). As the graph shows, a relatively small number of HRGs account for a large proportion of NHS resources. The programme is based on the concept that by focusing on a limited range of HRGs (or related care groups), the NHS Institute can help the NHS make the maximum impact in improving the quality and value of care for NHS patients. The series of HRGs chosen were: • acute admissions in adult mental health • acute stroke • Caesarean section • fractured neck of femur • cholecystectomy The initial series of HRGs (or related patient groupings) were chosen on the basis that they were high volume, and hence high resource consumers, and also represented a range of clinical areas. • short stay emergency care (length of stay two days or less) • urinary tract infections (as a tracker condition for frail elderly patients) • primary hip and knee replacement. The document covers: • the Delivering Quality and Value team’s approach • the key characteristics of organisations providing high quality care and value for money • measures for improvement • further information. 01 The approach A literature review was undertaken of the recognised evidence in delivering optimised care for women having a baby. The ‘Further information’ section gives further detail of the documentary evidence. A thorough data analysis was undertaken using nationally available data from Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) as an indicator to rank and identify organisations using Caesarean section rates and average length of stay. The initial statistics were then adjusted for age and deprivation levels, mortality rate and readmission rates. Verifying the selection of organisations 02 Having identified the local health and social care communities, we then approached the organisations to allow us to visit them and observe how they manage this group of patients. The ‘Acknowledgements’ section lists the organisations we visited. The information contained within this pathway was only possible because health and social care communities allowed us to see their practice. We then undertook site visits, ensuring that at least 50% of our time was spent observing, watching, listening and looking at the flow and processes of care. We also explored the use of information to aid clinical and non-clinical decision making. The remaining time was spent conducting a series of semistructured interviews with key members of staff across the pathway of care (including obstetric medical staff, midwives, healthcare assistants, anaesthetists, paediatricians, information analysts, and middle and senior managers, including chief executives), and with patients. In total we interviewed or observed over 140 people for this pathway, and spoke to many others informally through our observations. 1 Co-production with the NHS, involving all sites visited and national bodies and experts relevant to the pathway The knowledge we gained from these visits and the co-production events1 was then consolidated, and the optimised pathways of care illustrated later in the document were identified. We worked in partnership with the NHS throughout this project to validate the pathway and the knowledge gained from the site visits, and to identify measures for improvement that would be helpful indicators for evaluating the impact of change. 03 How to use this document This document provides the opportunity to share what we have learned from the trusts we worked with. Each NHS maternity service is at a different stage on the journey towards providing optimal care. For most, the debate is not about what constitutes best practice, but about how to make the changes necessary in order to achieve it, with all the pressures and constraints that day-to-day working brings. Our aim is to provide useful examples of how some trusts have made developments and changes that have contributed to their aspirations to promote safe maternity care with reductions in intervention rates. Some of these practices will already be widespread and others will be irrelevant in the context of individual services, but we hope that there are success stories here that will be helpful in strengthening practice or provide ideas for improving it further. This document identifies the characteristics of organisations whose maternity services are high performers in minimising Caesarean section (CS) rates. We have referred to these as ‘overarching characteristics’. The document then describes three key pathways that can contribute to the reduction of CS rates in the context of providing optimal quality and value for money in maternity care: • the management of women in their first pregnancy and labour • the management of women with one previous CS to promote vaginal birth after Caesarean (VBAC) • the management of women undergoing an elective CS. For each of these pathways, we have identified the key characteristics, what might prevent a trust from moving towards these, examples of good practice and suggested measures for improvement. Each pathway is illustrated with case studies and quotations from service providers. Caesarean section pathway Context In the past 15 years, the proportion of CS births has been increasing steadily in England. In 1989/90, CS accounted for 12% of all births, while in 2005/06 the rate had risen to 24%. (The proportion of vaginal instrumental deliveries remained unchanged over the same period.) This increase in operative births has not been accompanied by a measurable improvement in the outcome for the baby, and has been shown to carry an increased risk to the mother of morbidity and mortality over normal delivery. Figure 2 Caesarean sections (with and without complications) as a percentage of all births Caesarean sections now account for 24.1% of all births. England 1996–2006 30 04 25 % of all births 20 15 10 5 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year There is wide variation in the CS rate from one maternity unit to another. These differences cannot be readily explained by factors related to size, complexity of clinical work or demographic variations, but variation in clinical practice does contribute to the CS rate. This might be influenced by cultural and organisational factors. In 2004/05, 36 of the 186 maternity units in England had CS rates below 20% and 26 had CS rates above 27% (Figure 3). Figure 3 The Caesarean section rate varies from 12.5% to 34.6%. % rate Caesarean section rate (percentage) by trust of all births (with and without complications) England 2005/06 05 There is wide professional unease at the continuing increase in CS rates - especially as this trend remains inadequately explained. The majority of senior obstetricians and midwives believe that rates could and should be lower. Some units have actively engaged in strategies to reduce the number of CS births and have made significant improvements or prevented the rise in rates observed in other places. However, even these high performers recognise that more could be achieved. The maternity services we worked with were diverse in size - from 2,200 births annually to over 8,000 - in demography - from rural shire to inner-city multiethnicity - and in terms of case complexity - from standalone birthing unit to tertiary referral centre. Nevertheless, there were strong common themes in their aims and approaches to managing Caesarean sections. There was a general belief that maternity units applying best practice to the management of pregnancy, labour and delivery will achieve a CS rate that is consistently below 20% and will have aspirations to reduce that rate to 15%. Delivering quality and value and achieving optimal care Maternity care has been at the forefront of the development of evidence-based guidance on best practice. This has been driven by the desire of doctors and midwives to improve the quality of their service, by women’s own demands for reliable information and choice, and by the recognition of the burden placed on society by poor maternity outcomes. 06 Midwives and obstetricians have a tradition of openness through documents such as the confidential enquiries into maternal mortality and, more recently, into perinatal deaths. They have long recognised the value of multidisciplinary working and mutual learning. Evidencebased guidelines have been produced by individual professional bodies and, recently, by the National Collaborating Centre for Women’s and Children’s Health, funded by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). This group has produced extensive guidance on Caesarean sections, and is also due to publish guidance on intrapartum care. Midwives, doctors and maternity service managers are generally well informed about the existence of these guidelines and their content. However, in the context of their busy jobs and the conflicting pressures placed on them, it is difficult for them to make the changes necessary to achieve optimal care. Staff are well aware of their goal - the problem is identifying how to get there. This document brings together examples of practice that individual maternity services believe have helped them to move towards optimal care. Data quality within maternity services varies a great deal; many services still do not fully understand what needs to be in the case notes in order for the correct HRG to be attributed to a patient’s spell. Much of the Hospital Episode Statistics data relating to the delivery HRGs is in fact inaccurate, but the introduction of the latest revision of the HRG classification, HRG 4 (in 2008), will solve some of these difficulties. During 2005/06, maternity services represented £1.87 billion - 2.6% of total NHS spending for that period. ‘Normal delivery without complications’ (HRG code N7) is the HRG with the largest number of spells coded to it, with 348,579 spells during 2005/06. Of the babies born in England during 2005/06, 24% were delivered by CS, but these births actually represented 40.3% of all spending on delivery HRGs. If the national CS rate were to drop below 20%, it is estimated that £37.7 million would be saved (based on an average of the actual payment per delivery during 2005/06). At the level of the health economy there is clearly a financial case as well as a clinical one to reduce the CS rate, yet it is apparent from our observations that Payment by Results (PbR) actually creates a perverse incentive for trusts to undertake elective Caesarean sections, as they create a greater profit margin against the tariff than normal deliveries do (Figure 4). Figure 4 Baseline tariff payments (2006/07) and activity for Caesarean section and normal delivery Without complications Annual volume2 With complications Annual volume2 Normal delivery £735 348,579 £1,097 24,277 Caesarean section £1,370 115,579 £1,879 21,643 There is great potential for local health systems to release resources by managing Caesarean section rates. Trusts would be able to make financial savings through a reduction in bed stock if there were fewer Caesarean sections. The typical length of stay for a CS is three to four days, while it is just one to two days for a normal delivery: if more women delivered normally, the number of bed days would drop. This would create surplus bed capacity. Figure 5 Average length of stay for Caesarean sections (with and without complications) England 2005/06 8 Average length of stay (days) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Trusts 2 Based on Hospital Episode Statistics, 2005/06 There is variation of more than two days in length of stay between trusts. 07 Identifying the pathways With the help of the trusts we talked to, we mapped out the key milestones and decision points within a woman’s pregnancy and birth experience. These are illustrated in Figure 6. Figure 6 Pre/Inter pregnancy Booking Low-risk pregnancy care No Yes Mode of delivery, eg Csection Preassessment Vaginal delivery Labour and birth Normal Progression of Labour No Admission C-section Intervention eg Syntocinon or Unsuccessful instrumental delivery Successful Location, eg birthing unit Antenatal Midwifery -led Consultant -led 08 Discharge from midwifery services Transfer of care to community teams Postnatal Education and debriefing Recovery We have identified three pathways of care that particularly influence CS rates. These are shown in Figures 7, 8 and 9. Figure 7 The management of women in their first pregnancy and labour Pre-pregnancy Booking Antenatal care Labour and birth Trusts told us that women in their first pregnancy and labour offered the greatest opportunity to reduce CS rates in the long term. Women who experience a normal delivery in their first pregnancy are highly likely to do the same in subsequent pregnancies. These women have an important lifetime advantage over women who undergo a Caesarean section, and they confer a significant cumulative benefit on the health economy. even before conception. Women are exposed to messages about pregnancy and childbirth through family and friends, through the media and through existing contact with health and social care professionals. Maternity services have limited opportunities to influence the national media, but they do have a role to play in ensuring that all professionals within the health economy act as informed advocates for normality. The pathway for women in their first pregnancy and labour starts The birth outcome is influenced throughout the process of formal maternity care. Midwives are the key health professionals, offering a continuous and consistent message prior to labour. This pathway ends with labour and birth, where a normal outcome is achieved through genuine multidisciplinary teamwork. If an emergency CS is required, the second pathway - the management of women who have had one previous CS immediately becomes relevant to the outcome of the next pregnancy. 09 Figure 8 The management of women to promote vaginal birth after Caesarean (VBAC) Postnatal care Inter-pregnancy Antenatal care Labour and birth 10 Trusts identified the care of women who have had one previous CS as a critical area for reducing the overall CS rate. The ‘once a section, always a section’ belief is increasingly questioned in the light of accumulating evidence, and vaginal birth after Caesarean section (VBAC) is now considered to be a safe option for most women. However, women themselves often think that history will repeat itself and that another CS is inevitable or preferable to their previous experience. Women need accurate information about events and their significance for the future, including the possibility of VBAC, as soon as possible. Therefore the pathway for this group of patients starts in the postnatal period of one pregnancy and finishes with the management of the next labour and birth. 11 Figure 9 The elective Caesarean section process Antenatal care Labour and birth Postnatal care In those women where the need for delivery by CS is agreed during the antenatal period, the care process should be as efficient as possible. It is for this group of women that trusts have the greatest potential to deliver care below tariff. As shown in Figure 9, the elective CS process runs from the antenatal to the postnatal period. What are the characteristics of services aspiring to optimal care? ‘We focus on keeping pregnancy and birth normal.’ ‘We are a real team – we understand and respect roles and expertise.’ ‘Our leaders are visible and vocal.’ ‘Our guidelines are evidence-based and up to date.’ ‘We all practise to the same guidelines – no opting out.’ ‘We manage women’s expectations and prepare them for the reality of labour.’ ‘We give accurate information about risks and benefits, but with a positive spin.’ ‘If a Caesarean section is planned, the process is efficient and effective.’ ‘We get accurate, timely and relevant information on our performance.’ 12 ‘We are involved with our users and stakeholders.’ The key characteristics of organisations providing high quality care and value for money The following characteristics have been found to be the key features for delivering quality and value for promoting normal outcomes in maternity care and reducing Caesarean section rates to a safe minimum. These are followed by suggested measures for improvement. The suggested measures for improvement are those that we judge to be of value to organisations to enable them to benchmark current practice against the characteristics described and to further improve it. Overarching characteristics Women are empowered to make informed choices about their maternity care. • Staff recognise and respect women’s views. • Women contribute to decisions about their care plan. • Women are supported and educated in normal birth throughout their pregnancy care. Staff share a common ethos and aspirations for high quality care. • Emphasis is placed on achieving normality rather than thinking in terms of reducing intervention. • Recruitment criteria include a commitment to promoting normality. 13 ‘We only employ people who share our belief in normal birth.’ Divisional manager, Women’s Services Maternity care is delivered by a multidisciplinary team, with a high level of mutual trust and respect between professions. • There is an open and inclusive communication structure. • Strong clinical leadership is visible to all staff. • Staff feel empowered to challenge each other constructively. ‘We support our midwives to challenge doctors when they see them doing things that are outside our agreed guidelines.’ Consultant obstetrician There is a robust clinical governance structure throughout the trust. • The trust board champions an open and just culture. • Preparation for Clinical Negligence Scheme for Trusts (CNST) assessments is properly resourced. • Learning from adverse incidents is systematically spread through the organisation. There is an embedded and sustainable model of good clinical practice. • Evidence-based care is adopted wherever available. • Clinical guidelines are regularly updated. • Everyone is committed to the use of agreed clinical guidelines. Maternity services provide value for money. 14 • A consistent costing model is applied to maternity services. • The directorate finance officer attends and contributes to all business meetings. • Finance staff understand clinical issues. • There is a thorough understanding of PbR. Effective communication and use of information enhance decision making. • Staff receive timely feedback on clinical outcomes: • individual case review and feedback within 24 hours • weekly multidisciplinary review of CS or abnormalities in labour • monthly statistical information includes CS and VBAC rates, as well as length of stay. ‘At handover each morning, every emergency CS undertaken over the previous 24 hours is reviewed by the multidisciplinary team. This provides team members with the opportunity to receive early review of decisions by all members of the team. Midwives challenge doctors and vice versa.’ Consultant obstetrician • Maternity information systems are designed to benefit users, saving work and producing clinically relevant information: • paperwork is replaced by an output from the information system so there is no duplication. • Statistical information is interesting and meaningful: • run charts show change with time • statistical process control charts are used. Several trusts that we visited displayed their monthly data in run charts and left them on the labour ward notice board for both staff and patients. One trust provided information for each consultant. Accurate and comprehensive clinical coding is used to ensure the correct HRG. • There is regular communication between clinicians and coders. • There is a clear, robust coding process, agreed by all. • There is a common knowledge and understanding of what constitutes a ‘complication’. • Maternity information systems are programmed to support accurate coding. One trust in the South West has made inroads into improving the quality of information in the case notes by running workshops for midwives to improve their understanding of what coders require. Measures for improvement • Percentage of women who contribute to their birth plan (target should be 100%). • Multidisciplinary attendance at clinical review meetings. • Maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity rates. • Percentage of guidelines that are referenced to best practice and reviewed annually (target should be 90%). • Percentage of clinical staff who are aware of monthly CS rates and trends (target should be 90%). • Accuracy of HRG attributions. • Depth of coding in upper quartile. 15 Characteristics of the management of women in their first pregnancy and labour Pre-pregnancy Booking Antenatal care Labour and birth 16 Pre-pregnancy The health and social care communities work in partnership to promote the concept of normal pregnancy and childbirth. What could prevent you from achieving this? Women receive conflicting information from different agencies. Women get a distorted view of pregnancy and birth via the media. Examples of best practice: • Children’s Centre staff offer information about healthy pregnancy and normal birth. ‘We are moving midwives out of GP surgeries and into the new Children’s Centres.’ Community midwife • Maternity services support other specialist clinical departments to ensure good pre-pregnancy advice and care. • Professionals work with representatives of hard-to-reach groups to improve access to services. One trust is improving access to maternity services for asylumseekers by employing a midwife within the community specifically for this group of women. ‘Understanding your population helps … it breeds cooperation … we are sensitive to the needs of all our women - not just those from ethnic minorities.’ Head of midwifery 17 Booking All pregnancies are treated as normal until proven otherwise. What could prevent you from achieving this? A perception of clinical risk results in the medicalisation of pregnancy. Healthcare professionals lack the skills to promote normality. Examples of best practice: • All women are able to access a midwife directly to book pregnancy care. • The midwife is the lead healthcare professional throughout; for normal pregnancies, no named obstetrician is required. • There is a choice of time and location for booking, including home and workplace. 18 • Risk factors are identified using agreed criteria. • If risks are identified, midwives have the skills and knowledge to optimise the potential for normal care. ‘Consultants used to review all booking notes and umpire the care pathway. This is now done by the ANC - antenatal clinic midwife team - avoiding inappropriate medical involvement.’ Lead antenatal midwife One trust has introduced a triage system at the booking stage that has successfully halved the number of women requiring a consultant appointment. This has freed up consultant obstetrician time, so that women now receive up to 45 minutes to discuss their concerns and issues with a consultant. The triage midwife streams women in red, amber and green pathways, with only those on the red pathway needing to see an obstetrician. Antenatal care Women receive information that allows them to make informed choices about their plan of care. What could prevent you from achieving this? Health professionals do not use information appropriately to meet the needs of women. Examples of best practice: • Antenatal care is offered in convenient and appropriate settings, eg in Children’s Centres or community centres. • Patient information leaflets are evidence-based. • Women are given consistent and balanced information on the risks and benefits of all modes of delivery, taking individual circumstances into account. • Women are informed about the options for place of birth. • Staff work with women to ensure that they have realistic expectations of labour, birth and parenthood. • The expected length of postnatal stay is agreed during the antenatal period. • Women are educated in active birth techniques. One maternity service has worked hard to ensure that its belief in normality becomes a reality for the women that it serves by establishing links with voluntary organisations and providing active birth teachers. • Women are offered appropriate professional support to address their concerns and fears about childbirth. • Women with a breech presentation are offered external cephalic version (ECV) by a skilled professional, in accordance with best practice guidelines. It is important to recognise that women with physical, learning or mental disabilities have the potential to have a normal delivery. One trust in the north of England employs a specialist midwife for disabled women. The philosophy of the service for women is that of ‘normality with specific needs’. The focus is very much on what is normal, rather than on the problems that these women have. 19 Case study East Kent Hospitals NHS Trust birth centres The maternity services currently offered by the East Kent Hospitals NHS Trust include two birth centres, one in Dover and the other in Canterbury. In 2005, just over 800 women delivered their babies in these centres. As well as helping women through labour and birth, the centres offer a variety of other maternity services. 20 The midwives working at the birth centres are community midwives who provide antenatal care for all women in Dover and Canterbury (not just those who have their babies there), many of whom attend midwife-led antenatal clinics at the birth centre. The midwives also provide postnatal care in the birth centre and in the community for all local women. The birth centre acts as a base for all of the midwives working in the Dover and Canterbury area, as well as a centre for women to access easily. Breastfeeding support Women who have their babies at one of the birth centres (as well as those women who transfer from the consultant-led units for postnatal care) are well supported with breastfeeding. The centres have had the highest breastfeeding rate on discharge from hospital of all East Kent maternity sites for the past two years. Day care Day care is another important service provided for all women at the birth centres. It is offered 24/7 for women to undergo routine treatments and investigations - eg administration of prophylactic anti-D, blood tests, glucose tolerance tests - as well as emergency treatment and assessment - eg not feeling the baby move, pre-labour rupture of the membranes, etc. The community midwives provide the day care service. Without it, women would have to travel to one of the acute sites such as William Harvey Hospital or Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital. Antenatal education Midwives offer regular workshops and classes at the birth centres to prepare women for the physical and emotional dimensions of birth and parenthood. These are well attended. Consultant-led clinics Weekly consultant-led antenatal clinics are also held at the birth centres. Women would otherwise have to travel to the William Harvey Hospital or the Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother Hospital. Routine ultrasound scans are also available at the birth centres. The small scale of the birth centres and their integration into the local community makes it possible for them to achieve many of the aims of modern maternity care that are so difficult to realise in larger, busier and more impersonal maternity units. Women in a high-risk pregnancy receive care that optimises their opportunities for a normal birth. What could prevent us you from achieving this? Women are denied the opportunity for normal birth for irrelevant reasons. Professionals do not recognise the value of working together to support high-risk women. Examples of best practice: • High-risk women receive team-based care from both obstetrician and midwife to optimise the potential for normal care and outcomes. • Midwives have direct and immediate access to a consultant obstetrician for advice. • There are clear guidelines for the management of women who experience variations from the norm in order to avoid inappropriate interventions. 21 Labour and birth One-to-one support is provided during labour by a trained carer, reducing interventions and improving outcomes for both mother and baby. What could prevent you from achieving this? Because of budget constraints or recruiting difficulties, staffing levels are inadequate for achieving one-to-one care. Examples of best practice: • The labour ward is reserved for labouring women. • Triage is used to prevent inappropriate admissions to the labour ward. • Women are assessed at home to avoid admission before labour is established. 22 • There is a designated high-dependency area for antenatal and postnatal women to allow midwives to care for more than one woman. ‘Those midwives [in triage] are experienced midwives – they can send women home. We [consultants] respect their clinical expertise.’ Consultant obstetrician • The skill mix is developed and innovative roles are created to allow time for midwives to provide care to women in labour. • Additional training is provided to enhance the role of maternity support workers. • Labour ward coordinators are supernumerary, to allow flexibility. • Advanced midwifery (and neonatal) practitioners are developed. • Theatre and recovery nurses support CS. • Operating department practitioners have wider roles. • Data inputting is performed by administrative staff. Case study Diana, Princess of Wales Hospital Maternity Unit Skill mix on the maternity wards The problem The maternity unit was housed in outdated, conventionally designed buildings. The split site required a large number of senior house officers (SHOs) to cover both sites and their working pattern did not meet the requirements of the New Deal on junior doctors’ hours. In 2003, the maternity unit moved into a new building, designed on the Labour, Delivery, Recovery, Postnatal (LDRP) model. This offered a high quality environment for women, but provided a challenge to midwifery and medical staff caring for women in labour in the four separate ward areas. assessments and interventions, including ventouse deliveries. The role of the labour ward coordinator has been enhanced to ensure that support can be provided to staff across the whole unit. Communication between the coordinator and midwives caring for women in labour is by cordless phone, so midwives do not have to leave the individual room. Although several coordinators are also AMPs, the roles are kept separate and are never performed together. The benefits For women: • improved environment for birth and the postnatal period • one-to-one midwifery care. What we did A full shift was introduced for the SHOs to comply with New Deal and European Working Time Directive. Savings made by reducing the number of SHOs, and rebanding the post funded an additional middle grade doctor and the training of five senior midwives as advanced midwifery practitioners (AMPs). They undertook a specially adapted academic programme supported in-house by the lead consultant for the labour ward. For staff: • increased career opportunities for practising midwives The AMPs participate in the SHO daytime rota, carrying out • costs savings. • stable, experienced staffing on the first tier ‘medical’ rota. For the Trust: • CNST requirements met • consultant presence and oneto-one midwife care contribute to low CS rate • improved recruitment and retention of staff 23 • Processes are in place to ensure that the philosophy of midwiferyled care in labour is maintained. • Midwifery-led care does not depend on physical boundaries; it can be made to work in separate locations, designated areas or adjacent rooms. • Community midwives follow women into the labour ward to provide continuity of care. ‘We do handover as a board round not a ward round … a doctor will only enter a room if requested to do so by a midwife.‘ Midwife coordinator Appropriate management of labour reduces the number of Caesarean sections. What could prevent you from achieving this? 24 Constraints are imposed by the design and layout of existing buildings. There are traditional patterns of hospital care. Examples of best practice: • The appropriate environment for labour is provided. • Labour rooms are equipped with aids to active labour, eg mats, birth balls, wall bars, water pools, etc. • Women are discouraged from lying in bed during labour. • The decoration of labour rooms is home-like and nonthreatening, with clinical equipment stored behind curtains or in cupboards. • LDRP rooms minimise patient movement and optimise continuity of care. • There are agreed protocols for the transfer of labouring women from home or the standalone birthing unit to the hospital maternity unit. One trust designed single LDRP rooms so that women remain in their own room for the duration of their stay, rather than being moved within the maternity unit. All medical equipment is kept out of sight. • The labour ward is managed by a multidisciplinary team. • Doctors and midwives trust and respect each other’s skills, knowledge and opinions. • The consultant obstetrician and coordinating midwife provide strong, visible leadership. All staff have direct access to their advice and help. • There is a ‘virtual ward round’ communication system that ensures that all staff are aware of activity on the labour ward. • When women arrive in labour, the midwife makes an assessment to decide whether the labour is high- or low-risk. • Doctors enter the rooms of labouring women by invitation only. • The labour ward consultant obstetrician is involved in decision making about every CS. There is an open culture in which staff are supported and challenged in their decision making. • A multidisciplinary review of all labour ward events is held daily. • Impromptu emergency simulations are carried out unannounced on labour wards. ‘Our skills drills are genuinely multidisciplinary. How do you know what your own role is if you don’t know what everyone else is doing? We make emergency simulations fun and give out prizes.’ Labour ward consultant midwife • Midwives are skilled in maximising the potential for normal birth. • All women, however high-risk, have the support of a skilled midwife during labour to optimise the outcome for them and for their baby. • Midwives are trained in non-invasive pain relief techniques, eg water, relaxation and breathing techniques, massage etc. • Midwives have the confidence to empower women to use selfhelp strategies. • Student midwives in training rotate through high- and low-risk practice to develop a range of skills. • Newly qualified midwives have the opportunity to consolidate their skills in caring for low-risk women in normal labour. 25 • Doctors acquire and maintain practical skills on labour wards. • Consultants are present on labour wards to provide support and hands-on training. • Consultants and trainees compare vaginal examination findings at full dilatation to optimise the potential for an assisted vaginal delivery. • If a woman with a breech presentation is admitted in labour, an individual risk assessment is carried out. • Labour is managed using evidence-based guidelines and protocols that are regularly reviewed and updated. • The augmentation of labour is timely and effective. • The significance of cardiotocograph abnormalities is assessed with fetal blood sampling. • There is the potential for STAN® automatic real-time analysis of fetal electrocardiography to enhance the accuracy of the diagnosis of fetal distress. • Induction of labour for the indication of post-dates alone takes place according to NICE guidelines and there are no ‘social’ inductions. 26 ‘When new doctors arrive, we say to them, “you’ve seen things done in different ways in different places. Here we all do things the same way”.’ Lead obstetrician, labour ward Measures for improvement • Percentage of women receiving one-to-one care from a midwife (target should be 100%). • Percentage of one-to-one professional support provided in labour (target should be 100%). • Percentage reduction in midwife time spent on nonmidwifery tasks (target should be 50% reduction). • Percentage of spontaneous vaginal deliveries (target should be greater than 70%). • Percentage of normal labour and normal deliveries (target should be greater than 50%). • Hours of consultant presence on labour ward (against the RCOG target). • Audit of patient experience of the labour ward environment. • Audit of appropriate transfers from the planned place of birth to hospital. • Audit of compliance with clinical guidelines. • Percentage of vaginal deliveries (target should be greater than 80%). 27 Characteristics of the management of women to promote vaginal birth after Caesarean (VBAC) Postnatal care Inter-pregnancy Antenatal care Labour and birth 28 Postnatal care There is a clearly defined discharge process. What could prevent you from achieving this? Women’s expectations may differ from practice. Examples of best practice: • Length of stay is discussed as soon as possible after delivery to reconfirm the antenatal decision or to adjust for any problems that occurred during labour and birth. • Women without complications have a midwifery-led discharge. • Community midwives are willing to take on postoperative care at home. Women who have had a CS or a traumatic birth experience receive information about maternity events to allow them to make informed choices about care in a future pregnancy. What could prevent you from achieving this? Staff have insufficient time or information to brief women adequately. Examples of best practice: • Doctors and midwives discuss pregnancy and labour events with women, and document their discussion in the clinical record. ‘Our doctors record in the case notes the recommended mode of delivery for any future pregnancy.’ Divisional manager • The discussion covers the implications for any future pregnancy. • Each woman is provided with written information about the reasons for her CS. • Discharge communications to GPs and community midwives reflect the information given to the woman. • Postnatal follow-up visits to hospital are offered selectively. ‘Community midwife workers come into the unit every day. We communicate with the staff who have provided care, so that when women raise concerns with us at home, we have all the facts.’ Community team midwife 29 Inter-pregnancy Women have access to support, advice and information about past and future pregnancies. What could prevent you from achieving this? The traditional demarcation of inter-agency responsibilities leaves a vacuum in care. Examples of best practice: • Trusts offer channels for women to access help and information from maternity services. • Women receive information about independent support groups. • Children’s Centres disseminate information to women between pregnancies. • Pathways are established for users to feed their experiences back in order to inform service development. 30 One trust offers a midwife-run Reflections Clinic, where women can contact the midwife directly to discuss any concerns about their experiences or about the birth. Antenatal care Women who have already had a CS are managed to optimise their chances of a normal delivery. What could prevent you from achieving this? Women and staff have inaccurate perceptions of pregnancy after a previous CS. Examples of best practice: • The maternity service has a standard approach for providing information about VBAC. • Women are given the best available information on the benefits and risks of VBAC. • Written information on VBAC is readily available. • Dedicated VBAC clinics are staffed by obstetricians and midwives with a special interest in this care. A hospital in the Midlands set up a separate clinic for the management of VBAC patients. Since its introduction, a VBAC rate of 80% has been achieved. • Women have an opportunity early in pregnancy to discuss mode of delivery. • Women are offered an appointment with a senior obstetrician or midwife. • Staff are able to access accurate information on the reasons for the previous CS before the discussion. • Women are given the time and encouragement to discuss their own feelings about delivery, so that any specific concerns can be addressed. Possible outcomes include: • VBAC agreed - no further medical involvement until 41 weeks • Elective CS agreed - midwifery care until planned admission at 39 weeks • Undecided - further appointment made for discussion at 36 weeks. 31 32 • A woman’s request for a CS in the absence of any clear medical indication is managed according to best practice guidance. • The reasons, concerns and fears underlying the woman’s request are explored, discussed and recorded. • A second opinion is sought where there is a lack of agreement about the appropriate mode of delivery. • The reason for performing a CS is clearly stated on the consent form. • A previous CS does not render a pregnancy high-risk - the majority of women appropriately receive midwifery-led antenatal care. ‘We don’t have women who are “too posh to push” - there is nearly always an underlying reason. If we uncover the real reasons and address them, women usually accept our advice.’ Consultant obstetrician Labour and birth Labour is managed to optimise a normal outcome. What could prevent you from achieving this? Health professionals lack experience in managing VBAC. Examples of best practice: • The multidisciplinary team is skilled and confident in the management of VBAC. • One-to-one care is provided by a midwife experienced in supporting VBAC. • Units ensure that all student and newly qualified midwives gain experience in VBAC from senior colleagues. • There are agreed roles for both medical and midwifery staff in the management of VBAC. • Multidisciplinary reviews of outcomes of intended VBAC are carried out regularly. 33 ‘Our local population is very keen on vaginal delivery, so there is a big demand for VBAC. We have developed our skills to meet the requirements, and that has fuelled the confidence of all staff - a sort of virtuous spiral.’ Consultant obstetrician • VBAC is managed according to best practice guidelines. • Agreed guidelines are followed by all staff to ensure consistency of support and messaging to women in labour. • Women receive written information about the guidelines for VBAC. • Interventions are timely and appropriate. • If the pregnancy is progressing normally, induction is planned for term +14 days to maximise the opportunity for the spontaneous onset of labour. • Guidelines for the use of Syntocinon in VBAC are identical to the guidelines for its use with any other labour. • VBAC is not regarded as a contra-indication to epidural analgesia, but epidurals are discouraged before labour is established. ‘We do not regard a previous Caesarean section as a risk factor in labour - our management is the same for VBAC women as it is for any woman in labour.’ Consultant obstetrician Measures for improvement • Percentage of women with delivery problems or CS receiving an oral debriefing (target should be 100%). • Percentage of women with delivery problems or CS receiving written information (target should be 100%). 34 • Percentage of women receiving VBAC advice before the 16th week of pregnancy (target should be 75%). • Percentage of women opting for VBAC (target should be 80%). • Percentage of women choosing VBAC who actually go on to have a vaginal delivery (target should be 80%). • Percentage of health records of women with a previous CS that are available at the antenatal appointment (target should be 100%). • Audit of reasons for women opting for a CS. • Audit of practice against VBAC guidelines. Characteristics of the management of women undergoing an elective Caesarean section Antenatal care Labour and birth Postnatal care The elective CS pathway has many features in common with other high-volume elective surgical procedures, and there are important opportunities to learn from best practice in those areas. 35 Antenatal care Preoperative care is undertaken by the most appropriate professional. What could prevent you from achieving this? There may be resistance to changing the traditional roles of healthcare professionals. Examples of best practice: • Consent for an elective CS is obtained. • The risks and benefits are discussed and documented by a consultant midwife or obstetrician. • The consent process is initiated in the antenatal clinic by the obstetrician agreeing to the operation. • The elective CS is booked for 39 weeks’ gestation. • Pre-assessment visits take place for all women. 36 • These are midwife-led, according to an agreed protocol. • They take place within one week of admission. • It is explained that the stay is not expected to be longer than 56 hours. • The expected date of discharge is agreed. ‘All women booked for an elective CS are seen by the midwife in the day assessment unit two or three days before. She does the whole pre-assessment and calls the anaesthetist or surgeon only if there’s a problem.’ Head of midwifery Labour and birth Elective CS is organised efficiently to minimise delays and clinical risk. What could prevent you from achieving this? The management of elective procedures is seen as a low priority on labour wards. Examples of best practice: • Women are admitted on the day of the operation. • Hand-offs are minimised. • Pre-operation, women are admitted to the recovery area or a postnatal bed. • The anaesthetic is administered in the theatre. • Following the operation, women remain in a single location on the postnatal ward. 37 A Midlands trust admits women on the day of operation direct to the recovery bay of the obstetric theatre, where they are prepared for operation by the recovery nurse. • Protected facilities are provided for elective Caesarean sections. • There are dedicated elective lists. • The obstetric team is separate from the staff of the labour ward. • General theatres are used, rather than theatres on the labour ward. • The skill mix in operating theatres is optimised. • Theatre nurses scrub, rather than midwives. • There is an operating department practitioner dedicated to maternity. • Maternity care assistants are trained for roles in theatre (running, scrubbing, assisting, etc). • Complications are kept to a minimum. • Compliance with infection control, antibiotic and thromboprophylaxis guidelines is audited. Postnatal care Mothers and babies return home as soon as clinically safe and appropriate. What could prevent you from achieving this? Women’s expectations of their length of stay are unrealistic. Community midwifery staff are unskilled in postoperative care. Examples of best practice: • The length of stay is less than 56 hours. • Effective analgesia guidelines are provided, to promote early mobilisation. • Women undergo a medical review on the first postoperative day. • There is clear information about any implications for a subsequent pregnancy. 38 • Midwives lead the discharge process, according to an agreed protocol. • There is a near-patient supply of discharge medication kept in the maternity unit. ‘For CS, discharge planning starts at pre-admission. Post-delivery women are seen on day one by the surgical team, and if there are no problems, women will go home (by midwifery-led discharge) on day two or three. Problems associated with waiting for discharge medication have been overcome by setting up Patient Group Directives and by having pre-packaged drugs on the ward.’ Midwife • Community midwifery care is coordinated. • There are clear channels of communication between the inpatient unit and community care. • Community staff are proactive in accepting women for early postoperative care at home. Case study Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust As Ward Sister, it’s my responsibility to make sure that my ward runs as efficiently as possible. As a Trust, we were under financial pressure and beds had to be closed. I knew we had problems with discharging patients which would only be exacerbated with reduced beds - we already struggled to find enough beds for women some days. We have nearly 6,000 births and 58 beds, so we are very busy. getting discharge medications from the pharmacy. So what we did was to set up Patient Group Directives (PGDs) and have stocks on the ward. We have PGDs for: • Paracetamol • codeine phosphate • Diclofenac • iron therapy • Cefradine • Metronidazole • Erythromycin About 18 months ago we did an audit to identify where the problems were. Our doctors were already seeing women who had undergone CS on day one. If everything is OK, then midwives discharge them, but the problem was around • Lactulose. This has reduced the time we have to wait by 90%, which has really helped with the beds, but more importantly the women get to go home when they expect to. 39 40 Measures for improvement • Percentage of women who have a pre-assessment visit within one week of operation date (target should be 100%). • Audit of delays in planned operations. • Percentage of women who have an agreed discharge date prior to admission (target should be 100%). • Percentage of women who are discharged on the planned date (target should be greater than 90%). • Percentage of women who are admitted on the day of the operation (target should be 100%). • Audit of post-operative infection rates. Benefits of promoting normality and reducing Caesarean section rates to a safe minimum To women To staff There will be no unnecessary interventions. Midwives will spend less time on non-clinical tasks. Childbirth will be viewed as a positive experience. There will be a sense of pride within units. They will receive support from staff to optimise the potential for normal birth. Working in a well functioning team will have a positive effect on staff retention. Women in labour will receive one-to-one professional support. All professional groups will derive a high level of satisfaction from providing high quality care and enabling women to achieve the outcomes they want. Women feel empowered in making decisions with support from staff. Mortality and morbidity rates will improve. Women will be able to return home more quickly to their families. There will be a greater opportunity to acquire and maintain a portfolio of skills. To the organisation To the taxpayer An enhanced reputation means that women will choose the organisation as the place to have their baby. Public money is being spent appropriately, where there is clinical need. A lower CS rate will mean fewer bed days, resulting in financial savings. Recruitment and retention will be better in a well functioning team in which staff have high levels of job satisfaction. Enhanced risk management will reduce litigation via the Clinical Negligence Scheme for Trusts (CNST). Saving costs on Caesarean sections means that money can be redirected into improvements for women’s and children’s services. Achieving optimal value for money in maternity services means that funds can be redirected towards other services, such as oncology and elderly care. Improvements in the long-term health of mothers and babies will reduce the burden of chronic care on the health economy. 41 Conclusion 42 The contents of this report are based on the Delivering Quality and Value team’s observations of the practices of NHS organisations that are judged to be delivering high quality care and value for money. Although these observations have been validated, it should be recognised that they may not be the only ways of delivering high quality care and value for money, but we believe that they will give valuable guidance and direction to those seeking this goal. • Understand how your organisation performs when compared against the key measures and benchmarks suggested. To improve services, organisations should follow this guidance and take the following simple steps: Further products will be produced to support implementation of this guidance and local improvement. In particular, the Delivering Quality and Value team expects • Generate a locally owned change programme for improvement. • Integrate the local change management programme within health community integrated service improvement programmes (ISIPs) and local delivery plans (LDPs). to produce the following to support the Caesarean section pathway: • Pathway to Success - Caesarean section: A self-assessment tool (available March 2007): a tool that will help trusts to assess their current practice and capacity, identify potential improvements and provide practical support for making changes. We would value your contributions to our future work. If you would like to be involved, or have any comments, please contact the Delivering Quality and Value team at [email protected]. Acknowledgements We wish to thank everyone who has contributed their time to enable us to carry out this work, and in particular the frontline staff who took time out from their busy schedules to show us how they work and for all the information they shared. The trusts we visited were: • Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust We would also like to thank the following for their contribution: • Care Services Improvement Partnership • Maternity Services External Working Group (Department of Health) • National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence • Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s University Hospitals NHS Trust • National Childbirth Trust • East Kent Hospitals NHS Trust • North West London Midwifery Strategy Group • Liverpool Women’s NHS Foundation Trust • Nottingham University Hospital • Northern Lincolnshire and Goole Hospitals NHS Trust • Royal College of Midwives • Royal United Hospital Bath NHS Trust • The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust • University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust • York Hospitals NHS Trust • NHS Employers • Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology • South Devon Healthcare NHS Trust • Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust 43 Further information Published material Department for Education and Skills and Department of Health (2004), National Service Framework for children, young people and maternity services, Department of Health, London. National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2004), Caesarean section: Understanding NICE guidance. Information for pregnant women, their partners and the public, NICE, London. Department of Health (2006), National Tariff 2005-06, DH, London. NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement (2005), Delivering quality and value: Focus on Caesarean section, DH, London. Flamm, B., Kabcenell, A., Berwick, D. and Roessner, J. (1997), Reducing Caesarean section rates while maintaining maternal and infant outcomes, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Cambridge MA. Ontario Women’s Health Council (2002), Attaining and maintaining best practices in the use of Caesarean sections, OWHC, Ontario, Canada. National Childbirth Trust conference proceedings (1999), The rising Caesarean rate: a public health issue, Royal College of Midwives and RCOG, London. Ontario Women’s Health Council (2002), Caesarean section best practices project: impact and analysis, OWHC, Ontario, Canada. National Childbirth Trust conference proceedings (2000), The rising Caesarean rate: causes and effects for public health, Royal College of Midwives and RCOG, London. Paranjothy, S., Frost, C. and Thomas, J. (2005), How much variation in CS rates can be explained by case mix differences, BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, No. 112, pp. 658-66. National Childbirth Trust conference proceedings (2002), The rising Caesarean rate: from audit to action, Royal College of Midwives and RCOG, London. Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) (2002), Caesarean sections, Postnote, No. 184, POST, London (www.parliament.uk/post/pn184.pdf). 44 National Childbirth Trust conference proceedings (2003), Making normal birth a reality: sharing good practice and strategies that work, NCT, London. National Childbirth Trust, The Royal College of Midwives and The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, Maternity Care Working Party (2006), Modernising Maternity Care - A Commissioning Toolkit for England (2nd ed) NCT and Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) Press, London. National Collaborating Centre for Women’s and Children’s Health (2004), Caesarean section: Clinical guideline, RCOG Press, London. Royal College of Midwives (2002), Understanding the national sentinel Caesarean section audit report 2001: an RCM topical briefing for midwives, RCM, London. Thomas, J. and Paranjothy, S. (RCOG clinical effectiveness support unit) (2001), The national sentinel Caesarean section audit report, RCOG Press, London. To find out more about the NHS Institute Email: [email protected] You can also visit our website www.institute.nhs.uk NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement, Coventry House, University of Warwick Campus, Coventry CV4 7AL Tel: 0800 555 550 © NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement 2006 All rights reserved If you require further copies quote ‘NHSIDQVC-Section’ Contact: Prolog Phase 3, Bureau Services, Sherwood Business Park, Annesley, Nottingham NG15 0YU Tel: 0870 066 2071 Email: [email protected]