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Confidential case reviews have been established as a means to improve the quality of maternity care for several decades. Impacts of these programmes, while difficult to demonstrate, have been observed on maternal and neonatal mortality rates, maternity policy and clinical practice. At a national level, maternal and newborn case review programmes identify messages to improve care through multidisciplinary review of medical records of all, or a sample, of mothers and infants who have died or have a specific morbidity. The major strength of such national programmes is that they allow lessons to be identified to improve care at all levels of the health system from national government policy to individual clinical practice. However, strengthening translation of recommendations into action, whether through a more active link with implementation processes or further development of dissemination strategies grounded in implementation science, is an important continuing focus.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2019.104848

Type

Journal article

Journal

Early Hum Dev

Publication Date

11/2019

Volume

138

Keywords

Confidential case review, Maternal, Neonatal, Quality improvement, Humans, Infant, Infant Mortality, Maternal Mortality, Medical Records, National Health Programs, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Quality Improvement