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Postpartum Discharge Transition

Readiness

Every Unit

  • Develop and maintain a set of referral resources and communication pathways between obstetric providers, community-based organizations, and state and public health agencies to enhance services and supports for pregnant and postpartum families.*
  • Establish a multidisciplinary care team to design coordinated clinical pathways for patient discharge and a standardized discharge summary form to give to all postpartum patients prior to discharge.
  • Provide multidisciplinary staff education to clinicians and office staff on optimizing postpartum care, including why and how to screen for life-threatening postpartum complications.*
  • Develop trauma-informed protocols and trainings to address health care team member biases to enhance quality of care.
  • Educate outpatient care setting staff on how to use a standardized discharge summary form to review patient data and ensure that recommendations made for outpatient follow-up and community services/resources have been carried out.

*See Postpartum Discharge Element Implementation Details

Recognition & Prevention

Every Patient

  • Establish a system for scheduling the postpartum care visit and needed immediate specialty care visit or contact (virtual or in-person visit) prior to discharge or within 24 hours of discharge.*
  • Screen each patient for postpartum risk factors and provide linkage to community services/ resources prior to discharge.*
  • In all care environments assess and document if a patient presenting is pregnant or has been pregnant within the past year.
  • Offer reproductive life planning discussions and resources, including access to a full range of contraceptive options in accordance with safe therapeutic regimens.*
  • Facilitate and assure linkage to relevant services in outpatient settings for care identified for postpartum risk factors.

*See Postpartum Discharge Element Implementation Details

Response

Every Event

  • Provide patient education prior to discharge that includes life-threatening postpartum complications and early warning signs, including mental health conditions, in addition to individual patient-specific conditions, risks, and how to seek care.*
  • Provide each postpartum patient with a standardized discharge summary form that details key information from pregnancy and birth.*
  • Conduct a comprehensive postpartum visit.*
  • Encourage the presence of a designated support person during all instances of care as desired, and particularly when teaching or education occurs.
  • Engage in dialogue with the postpartum patient around elements of postpartum self-care prior to discharge. * Implement a multidisciplinary discharge process to provide a coordinated pathway for clinical postpartum discharge, which may include multidisciplinary rounding.

*See Postpartum Discharge Element Implementation Details

Reporting & Systems Learning

Every Unit

  • Convene inpatient and outpatient providers in an ongoing way to share successful strategies and identify opportunities for prevention of undesired outcomes in the postpartum period, including emergency and urgent care clinicians and staff.
  • Consider a multidisciplinary huddle for postpartum patients identified as higher-risk for complications to identify potential gaps or adjustments to the standardized discharge process.
  • Develop and systematically utilize a standard comprehensive postpartum visit template.
  • Identify and monitor postpartum quality measures in all care settings.*
  • Monitor data related to completed postpartum comprehensive visits in each office, with disaggregation by race and ethnicity at a minimum, to evaluate disparities in rate of follow-up visit completion.

*See Postpartum Discharge Element Implementation Details

Respectful, Equitable & Supportive Care

Every Unit/Provider/Team Member

  • Include each postpartum person and their identified support network as respected members of and contributors to the multidisciplinary care team.*
  • Engage in open, transparent, and empathetic communication with pregnant and postpartum people and their identified support network to understand diagnoses, options, and treatment plans.

*See Postpartum Discharge Element Implementation Details

Patient Safety Bundle Acknowledgements

  • This Patient Safety Bundle was originally developed by the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health in collaboration with Erin Bonzon, MPH; Robyn D’Oria, RNC-OB, APN-CNS; Marian Earls, MD; Eve Espey, MD, MPH; Jennifer Frost, MD; Jarold “Tom” Johnston, CNM, IBCLC; Sue Kendig, JD, MSN, WHNP*; Lisa Kleppel, MPH; Julie Logan, MD, MPH; Ruth Mielke, PhD, CNM, WHNP; Allison Stuebe, MD*; Patricia D. Suplee, PhD, RNC-OB; Mishka Terplan, MD, MPH.
  • This patient safety bundle was revised by Sue Kendig, MSN, JD, WHNP; Pattie Lee King, PhD; Elliott Main, MD; Tiffany Moore Simas, MD, MPH, Med; Liz Rochin, PhD, RN; Patricia Suplee, PhD, RNC-OB.
  • The AIM Community Care Initiative, Dr. Haywood Brown, MD, Dr. Joia Crear-Perry, MD, FACOG, Dr. Linda Havey, DNP, RN-BC, RNC-OB, Kansas State AIM Team, Dr. Allison Stuebe MD, Dr. Sarah Verbiest DrPH, MSW, MPH, and the Virginia State AIM Team reviewed and provided feedback on this document.  



© 2021 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Permission is hereby granted for duplication and distribution of this document, in its entirety and without modification, for solely non-commercial activities that are for educational, quality improvement, and patient safety purposes. All other users require written permission from ACOG.

Standardization of health care processes and reduced variation has been shown to improve outcomes and quality of care. This bundle reflects emerging clinical, scientific, and patient safety advances as of the date issued and is subject to change. The information should not be construed as dictating an exclusive course of treatment or procedure to be followed. Although the components of a particular bundle may be adapted to local resources, standardization within an institution is strongly encouraged.