Perineal trauma management and follow-up: Are we meeting the standard of care?

Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

Published: February 2021

Background: Birth-related third- and fourth-degree perineal trauma is common and associated with short- and long-term complications.

Aim: To conduct a review of clinical audits investigating management of women with perineal trauma.

Materials And Methods: We identified all audits undertaken in eight New Zealand public hospitals between 2005 and 2014 that investigated whether women with birth-related third- and fourth-degree perineal trauma were receiving care according to clinical guidelines. We aggregated audit results and calculated the proportion of women receiving the recommended standard of care.

Results: During the review period, 25 audits investigated intra-operative (n = 11), post-operative (n = 14) and outpatient care (n = 18). Baseline audits showed variation in care by site; intra-operative care (range 39-96% for repair conducted under anaesthesia, 60-96% for repair by or under supervision of a senior clinician, and 33-54% for completion of Accident Compensation Corporation forms); post-operative care (range 40-93% for prescribed antibiotics and 33-96% for stool softeners) and outpatient care (45-84% for referral to outpatient clinic and 54-78% for physiotherapy follow-up). Sustained high quality of care and improvements in adherence with recommendations were seen for most of the follow-up audits (eg 90% adherence for prescribed stool softeners over three audits; over 50% increase in prescribed antibiotics over seven years).

Conclusions: These clinical audits exemplify the need to measure patient care against standards, learn from the findings, implement changes to improve patient experience and reduce life-long sequelae from perineal trauma. This review showed some progress in some care services and highlighted where further changes are needed to close evidence-practice gaps.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajo.13262DOI Listing

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