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Research ArticleOriginal Research

Improving Maternal Care with a Continuous Quality Improvement Strategy: A Report from the Interventions to Minimize Preterm and Low Birth Weight Infants through Continuous Improvement Techniques (IMPLICIT) Network

Ian M. Bennett, Andrew Coco, Janice Anderson, Michael Horst, Angela S. Gambler, Wendy Brooks Barr and Stephen Ratcliffe
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine July 2009, 22 (4) 380-386; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3122/jabfm.2009.04.090111
Ian M. Bennett
MD, PhD
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Andrew Coco
MD
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Janice Anderson
MD
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Michael Horst
PhD
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Angela S. Gambler
BA
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Wendy Brooks Barr
MD, MPH, MSCE
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Stephen Ratcliffe
MD, MSPH
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Abstract

Background: Maternal medical care (prenatal and postpartum) involves a set of clinical interventions addressing risk factors associated with important maternal and infant outcomes. Programs to increase the rate of delivery of these interventions in clinical practice have not been widely implemented.

Methods: A practice-based research network focused on developing continuous quality improvement (CQI) processes for maternal care among 10 family medicine residency training sites in the northeastern United States (the IMPLICIT Network) from January 2003 through September 2007. Documented delivery of 5 standard maternal care interventions was assessed before and after initiating a program to increase their frequency. Proportion chart analyses were conducted comparing the period before and after implementation of the CQI interventions.

Results: Data were available for 3936 pregnancies during the course of the study period. Results varied across the clinical interventions. Significant improvement in care processes was seen for 3 screening activities: (1) prenatal depression symptomatology (by 15 weeks’ gestation); (2) screening for smoking at 30 weeks’ gestation; (3) and postpartum contraception planning. Screening for smoking by 15 weeks’ gestation and testing for asymptomatic bacteriuria were already conducted >90% of the time during the baseline period and did not increase significantly after initiating the CQI program. Screening for postpartum depression symptomatology was recorded in 50% to 60% of women before the CQI program and did not increase significantly.

Conclusions: A practice-based research network of family medicine residency practices focused on CQI outcomes was successful in increasing the delivery of some maternal care interventions.

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The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine: 22 (4)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
Vol. 22, Issue 4
July-August 2009
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Improving Maternal Care with a Continuous Quality Improvement Strategy: A Report from the Interventions to Minimize Preterm and Low Birth Weight Infants through Continuous Improvement Techniques (IMPLICIT) Network
Ian M. Bennett, Andrew Coco, Janice Anderson, Michael Horst, Angela S. Gambler, Wendy Brooks Barr, Stephen Ratcliffe
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Jul 2009, 22 (4) 380-386; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2009.04.090111

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Improving Maternal Care with a Continuous Quality Improvement Strategy: A Report from the Interventions to Minimize Preterm and Low Birth Weight Infants through Continuous Improvement Techniques (IMPLICIT) Network
Ian M. Bennett, Andrew Coco, Janice Anderson, Michael Horst, Angela S. Gambler, Wendy Brooks Barr, Stephen Ratcliffe
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Jul 2009, 22 (4) 380-386; DOI: 10.3122/jabfm.2009.04.090111
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