Abstract

BackgroundRecent evidence indicates that continuity models of maternity care result in improved clinical and psychosocial outcomes, but their causal mechanisms are poorly understood. The recent Lancet Series on Midwifery’s Quality Maternal and Newborn Care Framework describes five components of quality care and their associated characteristics. As an initial step in developing this Framework into an evaluation toolkit, we transformed its components and characteristics into a topic guide to assess stakeholder perceptions and experiences of care provided and received. The main purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of this process.MethodsWe conducted twelve focus groups in two Scottish health board areas with 13 pregnant women, 18 new mothers, 26 midwives and 12 obstetricians who had experience of a range of different models of maternity care. Transcripts were analysed using a six-phase approach of thematic analysis. We mapped the identified themes and sub-themes back to the Framework.ResultsThe emerging themes and sub-themes demonstrated the feasibility of using the QMNC framework as a data collection tool, and as a lens for analysing the data. Of the four emerging themes, only Organisation Culture / Work Structure’ mapped directly to a single Framework component. The others—‘Relationships’; ‘Information and support’; and ‘Uncertainty’–mapped to between two and five components, illustrating the interconnectedness of the Framework’s components. Some negative sub-themes mirrored positive Framework characteristics of care. Some re-phrasing and re-ordering of the topic guides in later focus groups ensured we could cover all aspects of the Framework adequately.ConclusionAdapting the Quality Maternal and Newborn Care Framework enabled us to focus on aspects of care which worked well and which didn’t work well for these key stakeholders. Identifying ‘what works for whom and why’ in different models of care is a necessary step in reinforcing and replicating the most effective models of care.

Highlights

  • Delivering high quality maternity care is a key policy driver in the UK, following recent government reviews of maternity services in England (Better Births) [1] and Scotland (The Best Start) [2]

  • The emerging themes and sub-themes demonstrated the feasibility of using the Quality Maternal and Newborn Care (QMNC) framework as a data collection tool, and as a lens for analysing the data

  • Some re-phrasing and re-ordering of the topic guides in later focus groups ensured we could cover all aspects of the Framework adequately

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Summary

Introduction

Delivering high quality maternity care is a key policy driver in the UK, following recent government reviews of maternity services in England (Better Births) [1] and Scotland (The Best Start) [2]. These were produced against a backdrop of serious failures of clinical maternity care in one NHS organisation in the UK [3], and the fact that the UK fares worse than some comparable countries in key perinatal outcomes, e.g. preterm birth [4], and perinatal mortality [5]. The main purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of this process

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