Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/18046
Title: Outcomes for the First Year of Ontario's Birth Center Demonstration Project
Authors: Sprague, AE
Sidney, D
Darling, EK
Van Wagner, V
Soderstrom, B
Rogers, J
Graves, E
Coyle, D
Sumner, A
Holmberg, V
Khan, B
Walker, MC
Keywords: birthing center;childbirth;midwifery;quality of health care
Issue Date: 5-Oct-2018
Publisher: Wiley
Citation: Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health, 2018
Abstract: Introduction In 2014, Ontario opened 2 stand‐alone midwifery‐led birth centers. Using mixed methods, we evaluated the first year of operations for quality and safety, client experience, and integration into the maternity care community. This article reports on our study of safety and quality of care. Methods This descriptive evaluation focused on women admitted to a birth center at the beginning of labor. For context, we matched this cohort (on a 1:4 basis) with similar low‐risk midwifery clients giving birth in a hospital. Data sources included Ontario's Better Outcomes Registry and Network (BORN) Information System, the Canadian Institute for Health Information, Ontario census data, and birth center records. Results Of 495 women admitted to a birth center, 87.9% experienced a spontaneous vaginal birth, regardless of the eventual location of birth, and 7.7% had a cesarean birth. The transport rate to a hospital was 26.3%. When compared with midwifery clients with a planned hospital birth, rates of intervention (epidural analgesia, labor augmentation, assisted vaginal birth, and cesarean birth) were significantly lower in the planned birth center group, even when controlled for previous cesarean birth and body mass index. Markers of potential morbidity were identified in about 10% of birth center births; however, there were no short‐term health impacts up to discharge from midwifery care at 6 weeks postpartum. Care was low in intervention and safe (minimal negative outcomes and transport rates comparable to the literature). Discussion In the first year of operation, care was consistent with national guidelines, and morbidity and mortality rates and intervention rates were low for women with low‐risk pregnancies seeking a low‐intervention approach for labor and birth. Further evaluation to confirm these findings is required as the number of births grows.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/18046
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jmwh.12884
ISSN: 1526-9523
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jmwh.12884
1542-2011
Appears in Collections:Dept of Health Sciences Research Papers

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