scholarly journals An integrated service network in maternity— the implementation of a midwifery-led unit

2005 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sally K Tracy ◽  
Donna Hartz ◽  
Michael Nicholl ◽  
Yvonne McCann ◽  
Deborah Latta

Maternity services in Australia are in urgent need of change. During the last 10 years several reviews have highlighted the need to provide more continuity of care for women in conjunction with the rationalisation of services. One solution may lie in the development of new integrated systems of care where primary-level maternity units offer midwiferyled care and women are transferred into perinatal centres to access tertiary-level obstetric technology and staff when required. This case study outlines the introduction of caseload midwifery into an Area Health Service in metropolitan Sydney. Our objective is to explore the concept of caseload midwifery and the process of implementing the first midwifery-led unit in NSW within an integrated service network. The midwifeled unit is a small but growing phenomenon in many countries.1 However, the provision of ?continuity? and ?woman-centred? midwifery care involves radical changes to conventional hospital practice.

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15700-e15700
Author(s):  
Danielle M. Pastor ◽  
Justin T. VanBacker ◽  
A. Gregory DiRienzo ◽  
Donald T. Pasquale ◽  
Laurence S. Kaminsky ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna L. Hartz ◽  
Jan White ◽  
Kathleen A. Lainchbury ◽  
Helen Gunn ◽  
Helen Jarman ◽  
...  

The current Australian national maternity reform agenda focuses on improving access to maternity care for women and their families while preserving safety and quality. The caseload midwifery model of care offers the level of access to continuity of care proposed in the reforms however the introduction of these models in Australia continues to meet with strong resistance. In many places access to caseload midwifery care is offered as a token, usually restricted to well women, within limited metropolitan and regional facilities and where available, places for women are very small as a proportion of the total service provided. This case study outlines a major clinical redesign of midwifery care at a metropolitan tertiary referral maternity hospital in Sydney. Caseload midwifery care was introduced under randomised trial conditions to provide midwifery care to 1500 women of all risk resulting in half of the publicly insured women receiving midwifery group practice care. The paper describes the organisational quality and safety tools that were utilised to facilitate the process while discussing the factors that facilitated the process and the barriers that were encountered within the workforce, operational and political context. What is known about the topic? Caseload midwifery models of care have been established in a variety of community based and hospital settings throughout Australia with a reported reduction in clinical intervention rates while maintainning safety of mothers and babies. What does this paper add? This case study illustrates the strategies used to achieve a large sustainable clinical service redesign project based on the introduction of the caseload midwifery model of care. What are the implications for practitioners? Establishing midwifery group practice care within the mainstream maternity services has far reaching implications for the retention and recruitment of midwives and the improvement of clinical outcomes in childbirth.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenglin Ye ◽  
Gina Browne ◽  
Valerie S Grdisa ◽  
Joseph Beyene ◽  
Lehana Thabane

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