检查质量改进举措对减少孕产妇发病率的种族差异的影响

C. Davidson, S. Denning, Kristin Thorp, L. Tyer‐Viola, M. Belfort, H. Sangi-Haghpeykar, M. Gandhi
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引用次数: 14

摘要

本研究的目的是评估质量改进(QI)和患者安全措施以及数据分类对严重出血产妇发病率(SMM-H)的种族差异的影响。我院于2018年开始使用行政数据监测和报告SMM-overall和SMM-H率。2019年3月,我们开始按种族和民族对数据进行分层,并注意到比率的差异,非西班牙裔黑人女性的SMM率最高。这些数据在每月的部门会议上以运行图表的形式呈现。在此期间,我们医院围绕产科出血实施了几项QI和患者安全举措,并使用分层数据为指南制定提供信息,以减少种族差异。这些举措包括实施出血患者安全包,以及以卫生公平为重点对患者不良后果进行深入病例审查。然后我们回顾性地分析了我们的数据。我们感兴趣的结果是数据分层前(干预前:2018年6月- 2019年2月)与数据分层后(干预后:2019年3月- 2020年6月)的SMM-H。在我们的研究期间,有13659次交付:37%的西班牙裔,35%的白人,20%的黑人,7%的亚洲人和1%的其他。干预前,黑人和白人妇女的SMM-H率有统计学意义差异(p<0.001)。这种差异在干预后不再显著(p=0.138)。黑人妇女的SMM-H率从45.5%下降到31.6% (p=0.011)。我们的研究结果表明,结合种族和民族数据分层来识别差异并利用这些信息进行目标干预的QI和患者安全工作有可能减少SMM的差异。
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Examining the effect of quality improvement initiatives on decreasing racial disparities in maternal morbidity
The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of quality improvement (QI) and patient safety initiatives and data disaggregation on racial disparities in severe maternal morbidity from hemorrhage (SMM-H). Our hospital began monitoring and reporting on SMM-overall and SMM-H rates in 2018 using administrative data. In March 2019, we began stratifying data by race and ethnicity and noted a disparity in rates, with non-Hispanic Black women having the highest SMM rates. The data was presented as run charts at monthly department meetings. During this time, our hospital implemented several QI and patient safety initiatives around obstetric hemorrhage and used the stratified data to inform guideline development to reduce racial disparity. The initiatives included implementation of a hemorrhage patient safety bundle and in-depth case reviews of adverse patient outcomes with a health equity focus. We then retrospectively analyzed our data. Our outcome of interest was SMM-H prior to data stratification (pre-intervention: June 2018-February 2019) as compared to after data stratification (post-intervention: March 2019-June 2020). During our study time period, there were 13,659 deliveries: 37% Hispanic, 35% White, 20% Black, 7% Asian and 1% Other. Pre-intervention, there was a statistically significant difference between Black and White women for SMM-H rates (p<0.001). This disparity was no longer significant post-intervention (p=0.138). The rate of SMM-H in Black women decreased from 45.5% to 31.6% (p=0.011). Our findings suggest that QI and patient safety efforts that incorporate race and ethnicity data stratification to identify disparities and use the information to target interventions have the potential to reduce disparities in SMM.
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Quality & Safety in Health Care
Quality & Safety in Health Care 医学-卫生保健
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