Differences in obstetrical care and outcomes associated with the proportion of the obstetrician’s shift completed

Understanding and improving obstetrical quality and safety is an important goal of professional societies, and many interventions such as checklists, safety bundles, educational interventions, or other culture changes have been implemented to improve the quality of care provided to obstetrical patie...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2021-10, Vol.225 (4), p.430.e1-430.e11
Hauptverfasser: Yee, Lynn M., McGee, Paula, Bailit, Jennifer L., Wapner, Ronald J., Varner, Michael W., Thorp, John M., Caritis, Steve N., Prasad, Mona, Saade, George R., Sorokin, Yoram, Rouse, Dwight J., Tolosa, Jorge E., Mallett, G., Grobman, W., Stein, L., Campbell, P., Collins, C., Senka, J., Paychek, K., Peaceman, A., Zylfijaj, M., Reid, Z., Leed, R., Forester, S., Davis, S., Falk, M., Perez, C., Sowles, A., Postma, J., Alexander, S., Andersen, G., Scott, V., Morby, V., Jolley, K., Berg, B., Dorman, K., Mitchell, J., Spicer, K., Timlin, S., Wilson, K., Price, J., Kingsbery, J., Benezue, R., Bickus, M., Fischer, D., DeAngelis, D., Mercer, B., McDonald, P., Latimer, C., Guzzo, L., Gerwig, L., Loux, D., Frantz, S., Cline, D., Wylie, S., Iams, J., Wallace, M., Northen, A., Grant, J., Colquitt, C., Rouse, D., Andrews, W., Moss, J., Salazar, A., Acosta, A., Hauff, N., Palmer, L., Lockhart, P., Driscoll, D., Sudz, C., Dengate, D., Smith, F., Allard, D., Hunt, J., Tillinghast, J., Corcoran, N., Ortiz, F., Rech, B., Moran, C., Hutchinson, M., Spears, Z., Heaps, B., Zamora, G., Seguin, J., Rincon, M., Snyder, J., Farrar, C., Lairson, E., Bonino, C., Beach, K., Van Dyke, S., Thom, E., Rice, M., Zhao, Y., Momirova, V., Palugod, R., Reamer, B., Larsen, M., Tolivaisa, S., VanDorsten, J.P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding and improving obstetrical quality and safety is an important goal of professional societies, and many interventions such as checklists, safety bundles, educational interventions, or other culture changes have been implemented to improve the quality of care provided to obstetrical patients. Although many factors contribute to delivery decisions, a reduced workload has addressed how provider issues such as fatigue or behaviors surrounding impending shift changes may influence the delivery mode and outcomes. The objective was to assess whether intrapartum obstetrical interventions and adverse outcomes differ based on the temporal proximity of the delivery to the attending’s shift change. This was a secondary analysis from a multicenter obstetrical cohort in which all patients with cephalic, singleton gestations who attempted vaginal birth were eligible for inclusion. The primary exposure used to quantify the relationship between the proximity of the provider to their shift change and a delivery intervention was the ratio of time from the most recent attending shift change to vaginal delivery or decision for cesarean delivery to the total length of the shift. Ratios were used to represent the proportion of time completed in the shift by normalizing for varying shift lengths. A sensitivity analysis restricted to patients who were delivered by physicians working 12-hour shifts was performed. Outcomes chosen included cesarean delivery, episiotomy, third- or fourth-degree perineal laceration, 5-minute Apgar score of
ISSN:0002-9378
1097-6868
DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2021.03.033