Value in maternal care: Using the Learning Health System to facilitate action.
Emily Joy CallanderHelena TeedeJoanne EnticottPublished in: Birth (Berkeley, Calif.) (2022)
There is an increasing need to deliver high-value health care. Here, we discuss how value should be measured and implemented in maternity care through a Learning Health System. High-value maternity care will produce the highest level of benefit for women at a given cost. As pregnancy is not an illness state, and there is no cure or remission to be achieved, we believe that patient-reported outcomes should be an integral component of benefit quantification when measuring value. Furthermore, as care impacts more than just health outcomes-particularly in maternity care-there is also a need to consider patient-reported experiences as a part of defining the level of benefit. However, to move beyond traditional narrow and passive measurement of value, we need to partner with stakeholders to identify priorities for change, identify evidence for how to achieve this change, integrate measurement activities, and promote effective implementation, in a continuous, learning cycle-a Learning Health System. A robust Framework for implementing a Learning Health System has been developed, which could be applied in maternity care.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- affordable care act
- patient reported outcomes
- pain management
- patient reported
- primary care
- mental health
- type diabetes
- pregnant women
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- chronic pain
- insulin resistance
- human immunodeficiency virus
- men who have sex with men
- antiretroviral therapy