Organisation of perinatal care

< Back to Birth & transfer

Authors

Schlembach D, Simeoni U, Nagy Bonnard L, Bernloehr A, Cetin I, Grosek S, Johnston L, Jourdain G, Rossi R

Click on the image to read the standard in brief.

Target group

Infants, parents, and families


User group

Healthcare professionals, perinatal units, hospitals, and health services


Statement of standard

Perinatal care is organised in specialist and non-specialist centres to ensure access to optimal, preferably evidence-based, care with respect to medical knowledge, organisation structure, and staff.


Rationale

In order to deliver the appropriate level of maternal and perinatal care tailored to the severity of risk, the regional organisation of care needs to be based on designated centres of care, categorised as specialist or non-specialist centres, specifying activity that is appropriate in each. (1–10) Establishing clear, uniform criteria for designation of maternal and perinatal centres that are integrated with emergency response systems will help ensure that the appropriate numbers of trained personnel, physical space, equipment and technology are available to achieve optimal outcomes. It will also facilitate subsequent data collection regarding risk-appropriate care and has been shown to be efficient and effective in producing the best outcome for mothers and infants. (1–35)


Benefits


Components of the standard

Component

Grading of evidence

Indicator of meeting the standard

For parents and family

  1. Expectant parents are informed by healthcare professionals about the organisation of perinatal care and the importance of appropriate level of care.

B (High quality)

Patient information sheet1

  1. Expectant parents receive appropriate expert care. (1,5,7–10,12,13,15–17,19,22,28–37)

A (High quality)
B (High quality)

Parent feedback, patient information sheet1

  1. Care is relocated as close as possible to home as soon as clinically indicated. (5)

A (Low quality)
B (High quality)

Audit report2

For healthcare professionals

  1. A unit guideline on the management of high risk pregnancies is adhered to by all healthcare professionals.

B (High quality)

Guideline

  1. Training on the management of high risk pregnancies is attended by all responsible healthcare professionals.

B (High quality)

Training documentation

  1. Healthcare professionals practice as part of a regional perinatal care network with access to agreed protocols and guidelines.

B (Moderate quality)

Audit report2, training documentation

For perinatal unit

  1. A unit guideline on the management of high risk pregnancies is available and regularly updated.

B (High quality)

Guideline

  1. Expertise in the management of high risk pregnancies is developed in specialist centres.

B (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

  1. Capacity planning is facilitated.

B (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

  1. Care is enhanced by network based education in non-specialist centres.

B (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

For hospital

  1. Training on the management of high risk pregnancies is ensured.

B (High quality)

Training documentation

  1. Appropriate resources are available for the level of perinatal care. (38)

C (Moderate quality)

Audit report2, training documentation

  1. A continuous perinatal care quality improvement programme is established. (38)

C (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

  1. Accommodation is available for the partner when required. (see NICU design)

B (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

For health service

  1. Regional perinatal networks are organised.

B (High quality)

Audit report2

  1. A national guideline on the management of high risk pregnancies is available and regularly updated.

B (High quality)

Guideline

  1. Regional / national oversight is established to ensure safety requirements for pregnancy and birth. (9,36)

A (Low quality)

Audit report2

  1. A perinatal information system to support quality assessment, certification, and audit of network units is established and maintained. (38)

C (Moderate quality)

Audit report2

1The indicator “patient information sheet” is an example for written, detailed information, in which digital solutions are included, such as web-based systems, apps, brochures, information leaflets, and booklets.

2The indicator “audit report” can also be defined as a benchmarking report.


Where to go

Further development

Grading of evidence

For parents and family

  • Parents are involved in the monitoring of quality of organisation of perinatal care and neonatal transport.

B (Low quality)

For healthcare professionals

N/A

For perinatal unit

  • Ensure the availability of trained and experienced maternal-fetal specialists throughout the 24 hours.

B (High quality)

  • Dedicate accommodation within the hospital for expectant parents.

B (Low quality)

  • Benchmark services against national/international data (such as Europeristat). (38)

A (High quality)

For hospital

N/A

For health service

  • Benchmark perinatal outcomes using European obstetric surveillance system (such as Europeristat). (38)

A (High quality)

  • Regional / National oversight is established to ensure safety requirements for pregnancy and birth. (9,36)

A (Low quality)


Getting started

Initial steps

For parents and family

  • Parents are verbally informed by healthcare professionals about perinatal care.

For healthcare professionals

  • Attend training on perinatal care.
  • Enhance specialty training through on-the-job training and professional education programmes.

For perinatal unit

  • Develop and implement a unit guideline for standard and emergency care as well as transfer.
  • Distribute information material for parents on perinatal care.
  • Develop clinical perinatal networks.

For hospital

  • Support healthcare professionals to participate in training on perinatal care.
  • Collect information on perinatal care standards and equip perinatal units with appropriate healthcare professionals and material for patient care and training.
  • Provide resources for establishing and maintaining a perinatal unit.
  • Provide opportunities for on-the-job training, and experiential learning environments (clinical placements) for students undertaking professional education programmes.
  • Develop clinical perinatal networks.

For health service

  • Develop and implement a national guideline for standard and emergency care as well as transfer.
  • Develop information material for parents on perinatal care.
  • Submit and review perinatal data and output of surveillance systems.
  • Monitor perinatal outcomes using European obstetric surveillance system (such as Europeristat).

  1. Neto MT. Perinatal care in Portugal: effects of 15 years of a regionalized system. Acta Paediatr Oslo Nor 1992. 2006 Nov;95(11):1349–52.
  2. Hallsworth M, Farrands A, Oortwijn WJ, Hatziandreu E. The provision of neonatal services [Internet]. 2008 [cited 2017 Nov 6]. Available from: https://www.rand.org/pubs/technical_reports/TR515.html
  3. Ahluwalia J, Aloysius A, Booth P, Brady A, Calvert S, Craig S, et al. British Association of Perinatal Medicine. Service standards for hospitals providing neonatal care (3rd edition). 2010 Aug;
  4. American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, editors. Guidelines for perinatal care. 7th ed. Elk Grove Village, IL : Washington, DC: American Academy of Pediatrics ; American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; 2012. 580 p.
  5. American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Fetus And Newborn. Levels of neonatal care. Pediatrics. 2012 Sep;130(3):587–97.
  6. Barrentine M, Browne P, Grant J, Lambertz-Guima E, Robertson-Beckley R, Rodriguez M, et al. Core Requirements and Recommended Guidelines for Designated Regional Perinatal Centers. Georgia Department of Public Health, Maternal & Child Health Section, Office of Family and Community Health, Perinatal Health Unit [Internet]. 2013 [cited 2017 Nov 6]. Available from: https://dph.georgia.gov/sites/dph.georgia.gov/files/MCH/Core_Requirements_and_Guidelines._5.16.13_revised.pdf
  7. Laing IA. Where should extreme preterm babies be delivered? Crucial data from EPICure. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2014 May;99(3):F177-178.
  8. Marlow N, Bennett C, Draper ES, Hennessy EM, Morgan AS, Costeloe KL. Perinatal outcomes for extremely preterm babies in relation to place of birth in England: the EPICure 2 study. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2014 May;99(3):F181-188.
  9. Poets CF. Perinatal regionalisation in the UK: an international perspective. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2014 May;99(3):F176.
  10. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and Society for Maternal–Fetal Medicine, Menard MK, Kilpatrick S, Saade G, Hollier LM, Joseph GF, et al. Levels of maternal care. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2015 Mar;212(3):259–71.
  11. Ellings JM, Newman RB, Hulsey TC, Bivins HA, Keenan A. Reduction in very low birth weight deliveries and perinatal mortality in a specialized, multidisciplinary twin clinic. Obstet Gynecol. 1993 Mar;81(3):387–91.
  12. Yeast JD, Poskin M, Stockbauer JW, Shaffer S. Changing patterns in regionalization of perinatal care and the impact on neonatal mortality. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1998 Jan;178(1 Pt 1):131–5.
  13. Chien LY, Whyte R, Aziz K, Thiessen P, Matthew D, Lee SK, et al. Improved outcome of preterm infants when delivered in tertiary care centers. Obstet Gynecol. 2001 Aug;98(2):247–52.
  14. Poets CF, Bartels DB, Wallwiener D. [Patient volume and facilities measurements as quality indicators of peri- and neonatal care: a review of data from the last 4 years]. Z Geburtshilfe Neonatol. 2004 Dec;208(6):220–5.
  15. Sullivan SA, Hill EG, Newman RB, Menard MK. Maternal-fetal medicine specialist density is inversely associated with maternal mortality ratios. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2005 Sep;193(3 Pt 2):1083–8.
  16. Lui K, Abdel-Latif ME, Allgood CL, Bajuk B, Oei J, Berry A, et al. Improved outcomes of extremely premature outborn infants: effects of strategic changes in perinatal and retrieval services. Pediatrics. 2006 Nov;118(5):2076–83.
  17. Vieux R, Fresson J, Hascoet J-M, Blondel B, Truffert P, Roze J-C, et al. Improving perinatal regionalization by predicting neonatal intensive care requirements of preterm infants: an EPIPAGE-based cohort study. Pediatrics. 2006 Jul;118(1):84–90.
  18. Bartels DB, Wenzlaff P, Poets CF. Obstetrical volume and early neonatal mortality in preterm infants. Eur J Epidemiol. 2007;22(11):791–8.
  19. Rautava L, Lehtonen L, Peltola M, Korvenranta E, Korvenranta H, Linna M, et al. The effect of birth in secondary- or tertiary-level hospitals in Finland on mortality in very preterm infants: a birth-register study. Pediatrics. 2007 Jan;119(1):e257-263.
  20. Zeitlin J, Gwanfogbe CD, Delmas D, Pilkington H, Jarreau P-H, Chabernaud J-L, et al. Risk factors for not delivering in a level III unit before 32 weeks of gestation: results from a population-based study in Paris and surrounding districts in 2003. Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol. 2008 Mar;22(2):126–35.
  21. Lasswell SM, Barfield WD, Rochat RW, Blackmon L. Perinatal regionalization for very low-birth-weight and very preterm infants: a meta-analysis. JAMA. 2010 Sep 1;304(9):992–1000.
  22. Wright JD, Herzog TJ, Shah M, Bonanno C, Lewin SN, Cleary K, et al. Regionalization of care for obstetric hemorrhage and its effect on maternal mortality. Obstet Gynecol. 2010 Jun;115(6):1194–200.
  23. Zeitlin J, Ancel P-Y, Delmas D, Bréart G, Papiernik E, EPIPAGE and MOSAIC Ile-de-France Groups. Changes in care and outcome of very preterm babies in the Parisian region between 1998 and 2003. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2010 May;95(3):F188-193.
  24. Eller AG, Bennett MA, Sharshiner M, Masheter C, Soisson AP, Dodson M, et al. Maternal morbidity in cases of placenta accreta managed by a multidisciplinary care team compared with standard obstetric care. Obstet Gynecol. 2011 Feb;117(2 Pt 1):331–7.
  25. Janakiraman V, Lazar J, Joynt KE, Jha AK. Hospital volume, provider volume, and complications after childbirth in U.S. hospitals. Obstet Gynecol. 2011 Sep;118(3):521–7.
  26. Lehtonen L, Rautava L, Korvenranta E, Korvenranta H, Peltola M, Häkkinen U. PERFECT preterm infant study. Ann Med. 2011 Jun 1;43(sup1):S47–53.
  27. Rudge MVC, Maestá I, Moura PMSS, Rudge CVC, Morceli G, Costa RAA, et al. The safe motherhood referral system to reduce cesarean sections and perinatal mortality – a cross-sectional study [1995-2006]. Reprod Health. 2011 Nov 23;8:34.
  28. Hankins GDV, Clark SL, Pacheco LD, OʼKeeffe D, DʼAlton M, Saade GR. Maternal mortality, near misses, and severe morbidity: lowering rates through designated levels of maternity care. Obstet Gynecol. 2012 Oct;120(4):929–34.
  29. Kyser KL, Lu X, Santillan DA, Santillan MK, Hunter SK, Cahill AG, et al. The association between hospital obstetrical volume and maternal postpartum complications. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2012 Jul;207(1):42.e1-17.
  30. Neogi SB, Malhotra S, Zodpey S, Mohan P. Does facility based newborn care improve neonatal outcomes? A review of evidence. Indian Pediatr. 2012 Aug;49(8):651–8.
  31. Sudo A, Kuroda Y. The impact of centralization of obstetric care resources in Japan on the perinatal mortality rate. ISRN Obstet Gynecol. 2013;2013:709616.
  32. Lapcharoensap W, Gage SC, Kan P, Profit J, Shaw GM, Gould JB, et al. Hospital variation and risk factors for bronchopulmonary dysplasia in a population-based cohort. JAMA Pediatr. 2015 Feb;169(2):e143676.
  33. Bolbocean C, Wintermark P, Shevell MI, Oskoui M. Perinatal Regionalization and Implications for Long-Term Health Outcomes in Cerebral Palsy. Can J Neurol Sci J Can Sci Neurol. 2016 Mar;43(2):248–53.
  34. Imamura M, Kanguru L, Penfold S, Stokes T, Camosso-Stefinovic J, Shaw B, et al. A systematic review of implementation strategies to deliver guidelines on obstetric care practice in low- and middle-income countries. Int J Gynaecol Obstet Off Organ Int Fed Gynaecol Obstet. 2017 Jan;136(1):19–28.
  35. Newnham JP, White SW, Meharry S, Lee H-S, Pedretti MK, Arrese CA, et al. Reducing preterm birth by a statewide multifaceted program: an implementation study. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2017 May;216(5):434–42.
  36. Marlow N, Bryan Gill A. Establishing neonatal networks: the reality. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2007 Mar;92(2):F137-142.
  37. Frank JE, Rhodes TT, Edwards WH, Darnall RA, Smith BD, Little GA, et al. The New Hampshire Perinatal Program: twenty years of perinatal outreach education. J Perinatol Off J Calif Perinat Assoc. 1999 Jan;19(1):3–8.
  38. EURO-PERISTAT Project with SCPE and EUROCAT. European Perinatal Health Report. The health and care of pregnant women and babies in Europe in 2010 [Internet]. 2013 [cited 2017 Nov 6]. Available from: http://www.europeristat.com/images/European%20Perinatal%20Health%20Report_2010.pdf

November 2018 / 1st edition / next revision: 2023


Recommended citation

EFCNI, Schlembach D, Simeoni U et al. European Standards of Care for Newborn Health: Organisation of perinatal care. 2018.