Abstract

BackgroundReliable, timely information is the foundation of decision making for functioning health systems; the quality of decision making rests on quality data. Routine monitoring, reporting, and review of cesarean section (CS) indications, decision-to-delivery intervals, and partograph use are important elements of quality improvement for maternity services.MethodsIn 2009 and 2010, a sample of CS records from calendar year 2008 was reviewed at nine facilities in Bangladesh, Guinea, Mali, Niger, and Uganda. Data from patient records and hospital registers were collected on key aspects of care such as timing of key events, indications, partograph use, maternal and fetal outcomes. Qualitative interviews were conducted with key informants at all study sites to provide contextual background about CS services and record keeping practices.ResultsA total of 2,941 records were reviewed and 57 key informant interviews were conducted. Patient record-keeping systems were of varying quality across study sites: at five sites, more than 20% of records could not be located. Across all sites, patient files were missing key aspects of CS care: timing of key events (e.g., examination, decision to perform CS), administration of prophylactic antibiotics, maternal complications, and maternal and fetal outcomes. Rates of partograph use were low at six sites: 0 to 23.9% of patient files at these sites had a completed partograph on file, and among those found, 2.1% to 65.1% were completed correctly. Information on fetal outcomes was missing in up to 40% of patient files.ConclusionsDeficits in the quality of CS patient records across a broad range of health facilities in low-resource settings in four sub-Saharan Africa countries and Bangladesh indicate an urgent need to improve record keeping.

Highlights

  • Reliable, timely information is the foundation of decision making for functioning health systems; the quality of decision making rests on quality data

  • The 2008 institutional cesarean section (CS) rates at the study sites ranged from 7% to 53% (Table 2)

  • Many maternity ward and record room personnel reported that staff often did not understand the importance of proper record keeping and lacked training or motivation

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Summary

Introduction

Timely information is the foundation of decision making for functioning health systems; the quality of decision making rests on quality data. Routine monitoring, reporting, and review of cesarean section (CS) indications, decision-to-delivery intervals, and partograph use are important elements of quality improvement for maternity services. Proposed health facility indicators for monitoring the quality of CS include: indications; case fatality rates; stillbirth and early neonatal death rates; duration between the decision to perform CS and the procedure; administration of prophylactic antibiotics; and use of the partograph [6]. Such indicators need to be validated and operationalized as part of quality improvement efforts, to detect where missed opportunities and/or substandard care can lead to disaster. Provider performance can be improved with quality data from clinical audits, ongoing feedback, coaching, and support [8]

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