Transcript
Page 1: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

The challenge is ours …

Improving safety and quality by making maternity care better for all women

Caroline Homer 6th Obstetric Malpractice Conference 26 – 27 June 2014

Page 2: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

What is a ‘good’ maternity system?

• What is ‘good’ for you may not be good for someone else

• What feels ‘safe’ to you might not be safe to someone else

• Our willingness to accept ‘risk’ differs • Our own experiences shape our views

Page 3: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

My own story ….

Page 4: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

How did we get to this?

Page 5: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Choosing outside the ‘system’?

• Lack of choices • Lack of options • Lack of respect

“Some women were abused because they did or didn’t want a particular kind of pain relief during labour. Women were made fun of, or talked sternly to, like a naughty child, by midwives or obstetricians, when

they were at their most vulnerable, naked and prone on a table. Women had their babies taken from them

and placed in nurseries as a matter of course, the babies fed formula against the woman's wishes.”

Source: Mary-Rose McColl, Birth Wars, 2009.

Page 6: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving
Page 7: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Strengths

“Australia is one of the safest places to give birth or to be born” (Roxon, 2008) •  Well educated workforce •  Well informed consumers

•  High quality facilities •  Modern technology

•  Accessible (mostly)

•  Innovators and researchers Source: Maternity Services Review, Commonwealth of Australia, 2008

Page 8: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Weaknesses

“… current arrangements for the delivery of maternity services in Australia are not serving all Australian women as well as they should” (Roxon 2008)

• Limited models of care options • High rates of intervention - fear • Lack of respect for choice - fear • Funding issues – rural women, women who choose

homebirth • Access issues – Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander

women, rural women, young women • Professional turf wars

Source: Maternity Services Review, Commonwealth of Australia, 2008

Page 9: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Opportunities

• Well informed consumers • Well educated workforce • Research showing the benefits of different

models of care ▫ Clinical outcomes ▫ Cost benefits

• Positive policy environment – Towards Normal Birth (NSW)

• New collaborative opportunities …..

Page 10: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Threats

• Lack of focus on maternal and newborn health ▫ More focus on acute care, emergency departments,

ageing • Lack of indemnity insurance solutions • Imploding turf wars ▫ Midwife vs obstetrician ▫ Midwife vs GP ▫ Clinicians vs lawyers ▫ Private midwife vs hospital midwife ▫ XXX vs XXX???

Page 11: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Dreaming of better maternity care

Page 12: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

AAAQ (triple AQ) framework • Care must be: ▫ Accessible ▫ Available ▫ Acceptable

and of ….

▫ Quality

Source: State of the World’s Midwifery 2014. UNFPA, ICM, WHO

Page 13: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Quality maternal and newborn care

Renfrew et al (2014). The Lancet, 383: doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)60789-3

Page 14: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

What does this mean in Australia? • Elements of practice ▫  Support for normality – higher level care when needed

• Organisation of care ▫  AAAQ – continuity – community-based care ▫  Learn from errors

• Values ▫  Respect – communication – care tailored to needs

• Philosophy ▫  Using interventions only when necessary

• Care providers ▫  Educated, supported, respected for unique skills ▫  Real collaboration

Page 15: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

What can you do?

• Ensure the entire maternity system: ▫  includes respect, communication, community

knowledge and understanding, and care tailored to a woman’s circumstances and needs ▫ will optimise the normal biological, psychological,

social, and cultural processes of childbirth, reducing the use of interventions to a minimum

The Lancet Series on Midwifery 2014

Page 16: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

All women need continuity

Midwife-led care should the norm for all women as part of a functional consultation and referral network and effective collaboration

Page 17: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Enable spontaneous labour

Page 18: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Promote mobility during labour

Page 19: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Be with pain in labour

Page 20: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Have water immersion as a real option

Page 21: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Re-think the environment

Page 22: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Ensure one to one care in labour

Page 23: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Be flexible about supporters

Page 24: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Facilitate vaginal breech birth

Page 25: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Have options for place of birth

Page 26: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Enable women to choose homebirth

Page 27: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Promote and facilitate VBAC

Page 28: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Keep mothers and babies together

Page 29: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Have respectful collaboration

Page 30: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Recognise the role of the midwife

Page 31: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Explore why women and midwives choose other options

•  Listen to women o  Ask before telling

•  Be brave enough to hear why we failed – what we did or did not do

o  Don’t put your head in the sand – it won’t all go away

Page 32: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

• We have the power to change the system

• Don’t wait for someone else – it is up to us ▫ Midwives ▫ Obstetricians ▫ Policy makers ▫ Lawyers ▫ Managers and many others …..

• We need to work with women to make maternity care better for all women

Page 33: Caroline Homer - WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing, Midwifery & health Development University of Technology Australian College of Midwives - The Challenge is Actually Ours – Improving

Top Related