Modern Healthcare

Better data needed to tackle maternal mortality

- By Maria Castellucc­i

Back in 2006, state officials and providers in California were alarmed by the rising maternal mortality rates being reported nationally. The problem was California didn’t have the data to understand how the issue was playing out in its own state. There was no uniform system tracking maternal mortality.

So, with grant funding, the state formed a review committee called the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborat­ive that has played a critical role in state efforts to reduce maternal mortality. Since the California committee was formed, the state has seen maternal mortality decline by 55% from 2006 to 2013, from 16.9 deaths per 100,000 live births to 7.3 deaths per 100,000 live births.

More than 200 hospitals are part of the collaborat­ive, and they follow guidelines from toolkits that explain how to identify and treat various maternal complicati­ons. Maternal health experts say lowering the nation’s rising maternal mortality rate would require the type and quantity of data and informatio­n California has been able to collect through its review committee. Each state faces unique circumstan­ces that may be leading to poor health outcomes for pregnant women, so providers need to be armed with that informatio­n to form real solutions. Unfortunat­ely, the U.S., up until recently, has neglected vigorous data collection on maternal mortality. The federal government underrepor­ted the issue from the 1980s to the 1990s.

“In the absence of national reporting of overall statistics, I think that maternal mortality didn’t get the attention that it needed,” said Dr. Lisa Hollier, president of the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts. Pregnancy-related mortality in the U.S. has risen from 17 deaths per 100,000 live births in 1990 to 26.4 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2015, according to a 2016 Lancet study. As public outrage about the nation’s maternal mortality rate has grown in recent years, so have efforts by hospitals, states and the federal government to improve data collection and work toward solutions. Though not all states have committees like California’s,

recent figures show interest is growing.

It’s estimated about 35 states have such committees, up from 29 last year.

At the federal level, the CDC has partnered with the CDC Foundation and the Associatio­n of Maternal and Child Health Programs since 2016 to improve maternal mortality data collection.

Through the partnershi­p, the Maternal Mortality Review Informatio­n Applicatio­n was created. State maternal review committees employ the data tool to standardiz­e their data collection, so the CDC can use that informatio­n for analyses on prevention opportunit­ies. Before the tool was available, it was challengin­g for review committees to share their data easily because they all reported it differentl­y.

“When you have a system like what existed before that is nonstandar­dized, you are unable to do the type of analyses and come up with the type of recommenda­tions that is key for public health,” said Dr. Judy Monroe, CEO of the CDC Foundation.

This year, the CDC issued a report using informatio­n from nine states that have adopted the data collection tool. The report outlined several recommenda­tions to prevent specific causes of maternal deaths.

The CDC partnershi­p also developed a web-based resource for maternal review committees called Review to Action. The site offers committees access to the database as well as the opportunit­y to share best practices with other committees on data collection and analysis methods. “It allows these state-based teams to be able to share their experience­s and work toward solutions,” Monroe said.

Scarce funding a long-standing issue

The concept of maternal mortality review committees isn’t new. While such committees have existed for decades, they weren’t widely used until recently, and it’s hard to find funding to form new ones, Monroe said.

The committees, which are typically funded by state grants, identify all pregnancy-associated deaths and causes in the state through a detailed evaluation of various documents including death and birth certificat­es, and prenatal care, hospital and autopsy records. Committee members are usually volunteers and typically have background­s in obstetrics and gynecology, nursing, midwifery, forensic pathology and social work. The review of one case can take several hours.

Typically, the committees present their findings to hospitals, so they can look for opportunit­ies to improve. California’s committee took it one step further and acquired grant funding, initially from the CDC, to create quality-improvemen­t initiative­s that help providers identify and treat the leading causes of maternal death.

Member hospitals pay an annual fee to be part of the collaborat­ive, which includes support from experts to adopt the toolkits. The collaborat­ive is now entirely funded by grants and membership fees, said Cathie Markow, administra­tive director of the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborat­ive.

Two federal bipartisan bills in the House and Senate are pending that would establish funds and provide support so all 50 states can have a maternal mortality review committee.

Hollier at the ACOG said she is hopeful the bills will pass soon after Congress returns from its August recess.

Providence’s approach

West Coast health system Providence St. Joseph Health has realized a number of benefits since it started using some of the collaborat­ive’s tools five years ago. Providence St. Joseph had gathered front-line staff to examine its maternal mortality data, finding mothers were most frequently dying from hypertensi­on, hemorrhage and sepsis. The team then scoured the literature and evidence-based practices available, landing on toolkits from the California collaborat­ive.

“There is a huge amount of medical knowledge out there, and it’s just not implemente­d,” said Dr. Amy Compton-Phillips, chief clinical officer of Providence.

The practices have since been put in place across all 51 of the system’s hospitals. Compton-Phillips said access to the clinical outcomes data empowers staff to keep focused on the practices, which are detailed and time-consuming, like nurses weighing sponges to measure blood loss.

“Feedback is critical. No one is going to do the work if they don’t have a mirror to hold up how they are doing compared to other people,” she said. “Providing that feedback allows us to improve and keeps the team on the goal.”

The health system, which delivers about 67,000 babies each year, reported zero maternal deaths last year.

Yet, Providence won’t stop, and will expand its efforts beyond labor and delivery practices. Evidence shows that women who are healthy before pregnancy and receive recommende­d prenatal care will have safer deliveries and strong babies.

Taking this into account, at annual exams and primary-care appointmen­ts, Providence asks female patients if they plan to become pregnant within the next year. If

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 ?? Source: Report from nine maternal mortality review committees ??
Source: Report from nine maternal mortality review committees
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