Pragmatic indicators for remote Aboriginal maternal and infant health care: why it matters and where to start |
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Authors: | Malinda Steenkamp Sarah Bar‐Zeev Alice Rumbold Lesley Barclay Sue Kildea |
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Affiliation: | 1. Northern Rivers University Department of Rural Health, School of Public Health, and The University of Sydney, New South Wales;2. Services, Systems and Society Division, Menzies School of Health Research, The University of Adelaide, South Australia;3. Australian Catholic University and Mater Mothers Hospital, Queensland |
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Abstract: | Objective: There are challenges in delivering maternal and infant health (MIH) care to remote Northern Territory (NT) communities. These include fragmented care with birthing in regional hospitals resulting in cultural and geographical dislocation for Aboriginal women. Many NT initiatives are aimed at improving care. Indicators for evaluating these for remote Aboriginal mothers and infants need to be clearer. We reviewed existing indicators to inform a set of pragmatic indicators for reporting improvement in remote MIH care. Methods: Scientific databases and grey literature (organisational websites and Google Scholar) were searched using the terms ‘Aboriginal/maternal/infant/remote health/monitoring performance’. Key stakeholders identified omitted indicators sets. Relevant sets were reviewed and organised by indicator type, stage of patient journey, topic and theme. Results: Forty‐two indicators sets were found. Seven focused on Aboriginal health, 23 on reproductive/maternal health, eight on child/infant health and four on other aspects, e.g. remote health. We identified more than 1,000 individual indicators. Of these, 656 were relevant for our purpose and were subsequently organised into 300 topics and 16 themes for antenatal, birth and postpartum, and infant care by indicator type. Conclusion: There are many measures for monitoring health care delivery to mothers and infants. Few are framed around remote MIH services, despite poorer health outcomes of remote mothers and infants and the specific challenges with providing care in this setting. Establishing relevant indicators is vital to support relevant data collection and the development of appropriate policy for remote Aboriginal maternal and infant care. |
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Keywords: | Health service performance quality measures infant health maternal health Aboriginal health remote health |
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