AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to update quality indicators for low-risk labor care in Japan, leveraging new clinical practice guidelines and a systematic approach involving experts and mothers.
  • - A modified Delphi method was employed, involving four main steps: redefining low-risk labor, reviewing recent literature, assembling a multidisciplinary panel, and conducting two rating rounds for new and existing quality indicators.
  • - The literature review yielded numerous recommendations leading to the creation of 13 new indicators, all of which were validated by the panel, resulting in a comprehensive set of 35 quality indicators for low-risk labor care.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Quality indicators are measurable elements widely used to assess the quality of care. They are often developed from the results of systematic reviews or clinical practice guidelines. These sources are regularly updated in line with new clinical evidence, but there are few articles on updating quality indicators based on clinical practice guidelines. This study aimed to update the quality indicators developed for low-risk labour care in Japan in 2012, mainly drawing on new or updated clinical practice guidelines, and making the process clearly visible and assessable.

Design And Setting: We used a modified Delphi method for the update. The procedure included four steps: (1) updating the definition of low-risk labour; (2) reviewing the literature published between June 2012 and December 2015 using five guidelines and two quality indicator databases to extract potential candidate indicators; (3) formation of a multidisciplinary panel including mothers and (4) panel ratings (two rounds between February and April 2016) on the validity of the candidate indicators, and judging the validity of the previous quality indicators drawing on the new evidence.

Participants: A multidisciplinary panel of 13 clinicians, including obstetricians, paediatricians and midwives, plus 3 non-clinician mothers.

Results: The literature review identified 276 new recommendations from 27 clinical practice guidelines including 2 published in Japan and 21 quality indicators. We developed 13 new candidate indicators from these sources and panel recommendations, 12 of which were approved by the multidisciplinary panel. The panel also accepted all 23 existing quality indicators as still valid, resulting in a total of 35 quality indicators for low-risk labour.

Conclusions: We successfully updated the quality indicators for low-risk labour care in Japan. The procedure developed may be useful for updating other quality indicators based on new clinical practice guidelines.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6398654PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023595DOI Listing

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