Abstract

BackgroundChildbirth could negatively affect the woman’s health through adverse events. To prevent adverse events and increase patient safety it is important to detect and learn from them. The aim of the study was to describe adverse events, including the preventability and severity of harm during planned vaginal births, in women giving birth in the labor ward.MethodsThe study had a descriptive design with a retrospective birth record review to assess the preventability of adverse events using the Swedish version of the Global Trigger Tool. The setting was a labor ward in Sweden with low-risk and risk childbirths. Descriptive statistics, Pearson’s Chi-square test and Student’s t-test were used.ResultsA total of 38 adverse events (12.2%) were identified in 311 reviewed birth records. Of these, 28 (73.7%) were assessed as preventable. Third- or fourth-degree lacerations and distended urinary bladder were most prevalent together with anesthesia-related adverse events. The majority of the adverse events were classified into the harm categories of ‘prolonged hospital care’ (63.2%) and ‘temporary harm’ (31.6%). No permanent harm were identified, but over two-thirds of the adverse events were assessed as preventable.ConclusionsThis first study using Global Trigger Tool in a labor ward in Sweden identified a higher incidence of adverse events than previous studies in obstetric care. No permanent patient harm was found, but over two-thirds of the adverse events were assessed as preventable. The results draw particular attention to 3rd-or 4th-degree lacerations, distended urinary bladder and anesthesia-related adverse events. The feedback on identified adverse events should be used for systematic quality improvement and clinical recommendations how to prevent adverse events must be implemented.

Highlights

  • Childbirth could negatively affect the woman’s health through adverse events

  • Obstetric care has been included in studies of in-hospital adverse events [11], but sometimes these results examine obstetric care in combination with either gynecology [12, 13] or surgery [14, 15]; rates of obstetric adverse events are difficult to pinpoint

  • Design The study had a descriptive design with a retrospective birth record review to assess the preventability of adverse events using the Swedish version of the Global Trigger Tool (GTT)

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Summary

Introduction

Childbirth could negatively affect the woman’s health through adverse events. To prevent adverse events and increase patient safety it is important to detect and learn from them. The aim of the study was to describe adverse events, including the preventability and severity of harm during planned vaginal births, in women giving birth in the labor ward. A systematic review demonstrated the incidence of adverse events in hospitals was 9.2%, with a preventability incidence of 43.5%. Studies in obstetric care alone show that adverse event rates vary from 0.4–3.6%, with a preventability incidence of up to 56.3% [16,17,18,19]. Due to different review methods, samples, inclusion criteria, adverse event types and context of care, it is difficult to draw any conclusions from the results based on these studies

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