Publication, Part of Maternity Services Monthly Statistics
Maternity Services Monthly Statistics, March 2022, experimental statistics
Official statistics
Inclusion of missing CQIM measure
When this publication was first released, due to a technical error the data for CQIMBreastfeeding was not included in the Measures csv file. This has been corrected and a new version of the Measures file containing the CQIMBreastfeeding data has been uploaded on 19/08/2022. The missing data has been available on the National Maternity Dashboard in the meantime, as normal.
19 August 2022 12:07 PM
Policy-specific analysis
Maternity Transformation Programme
In 2016, the Maternity Transformation Programme, led by NHS England, published 'Better Births' which set out the following vision:
'...for maternity services in England to become safer, more personalised, kind, professional and more family friendly; where every woman has access to information to enable her to make decisions about her care; and where she and her baby can access support that is centered on their individual needs and circumstances.'
The programme covers a number of specific policy areas for review, some of which are detailed below on this page.
Further information about the Maternity Transformation Programme is available here:
Continuity of Carer
What is Continuity of Carer?
The overarching aim is to ensure safer care for women based on a relationship of mutual trust and respect between women and their midwives.
The provision of care by a known midwife throughout the pregnancy, labour, birth and postnatal period can be associated with improved health outcomes for the mother and baby, and also greater satisfaction levels.
When a Continuity of Carer pathway has been agreed, this should be recorded and submitted via the MSDS.
Reporting
Data by organisation on the following can be found in the measures file available for download:
- Number of women placed on a Continuity of Carer pathway by 29 weeks gestation
- Plus two new data quality tests, both of which providers must score more than 5% for to have their data included in the figures for women placed on a Continuity of Carer pathway.
- Number of women in ongoing receipt of Continuity of Carer
- Plus four new data quality tests, all of which providers must score more than 5% for to have their data included in the figures for women in ongoing receipt of Continuity of Carer.
Filtered data looking at the breakdown of women by ethnicity and by their home’s index of multiple deprivation, has been published alongside the two main metrics.
Statistics on Continuity of Carer have been published to provide data submitters and users with insight into the quality and completeness of their data. Due to variations in data quality and completeness, these statistics may not accurately reflect the true number of women placed on a Continuity of Carer pathway at this early stage of development.
Saving Babies’ Lives
What is the Saving Babies’ Lives Care Bundle?
The Saving Babies’ Lives Care Bundle provides detailed information for providers and commissioners of maternity care on how to reduce perinatal mortality across England, and is contributing towards the aim of the national safety ambition to reduce stillbirth, maternal mortality, neonatal mortality and serious brain injury by 50% by 2025, as well as a reduction in preterm birth rate, from 8% to 6%.
The Care Bundle brings together five elements of care based on evidence and best practice:
- Reducing smoking in pregnancy
- Risk assessment, prevention and surveillance of pregnancies at risk of fetal growth restriction (FGR)
- Raising awareness of reduced fetal movement (RFM)
- Effective fetal monitoring during labour
- Reducing preterm birth
Some elements of the Care Bundle are captured by MSDS as part of routine care in maternity services.
More information can be found at: https://www.england.nhs.uk/publication/saving-babies-lives-version-two-a-care-bundle-for-reducing-perinatal-mortality/
Reporting
The Care Bundle’s five elements are supported by a series of process and outcome indicators. Where possible using MSDS, these indicators will be reported as part of this statistical series and will be released as soon as they are developed. The first set of indicators were published in the April 2021 (January 2021 data) release.
Personalised Care and Support Plans
What are Personalised Care and Support Plans?
To deliver safer care with better outcomes for all women and every baby it is directed that support should be provided to every woman to enable her to develop a personalised care and support plan to focus on her antenatal care, her birth care, and her postpartum care.
This three-stage care plan should be developed by the woman with her midwife, and other health professionals as appropriate, and set out her decisions about her care, reflect her wider health needs and be kept up to date as her pregnancy progresses.
Unbiased information should be made available to all women and genuine choices offered, to help them make their decisions and develop their three stage personalised care and support plan. They should be able to choose the provider of this care, have access to their own NHS Personal Maternity Care Budget, and be enabled to have personalised conversations about what matters to them. Care should be centred on the woman, her baby, and her family, and based around her needs and decisions.
Where a Personalised Care and Support Plan has been agreed, this should be recorded and submitted via the MSDS, including information about which type of care plan it is.
Administrative Sources
Maternity Services Data Set (MSDS): this is a patient-level data set that captures information about activity carried out by Maternity Services relating to a mother and baby(s), from the point of the first booking appointment until mother and baby(s) are discharged from maternity services. This is a secondary uses data set, which re-uses clinical and operational data for purposes other than direct patient care.
Last edited: 19 August 2022 12:24 pm