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Assessing safe and personalised maternity and neonatal care through a pandemic: a case study of outcomes and experiences in two trusts in England using the ASPIRE COVID-19 framework

Assessing safe and personalised maternity and neonatal care through a pandemic: a case study of outcomes and experiences in two trusts in England using the ASPIRE COVID-19 framework
Assessing safe and personalised maternity and neonatal care through a pandemic: a case study of outcomes and experiences in two trusts in England using the ASPIRE COVID-19 framework
Background
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in profound and far-reaching impacts on maternal and newborn care and outcomes. As part of the ASPIRE COVID-19 project, we describe processes and outcome measures relating to safe and personalised maternity care in England which we map against a pre-developed ASPIRE framework to establish the potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic for two UK trusts.

Methods
We undertook a mixed-methods system-wide case study using quantitative routinely collected data and qualitative data from two Trusts and their service users from 2019 to 2021 (start and completion dates varied by available data). We mapped findings to our prior ASPIRE conceptual framework that explains pathways for the impact of COVID-19 on safe and personalised care.

Results
The ASPIRE framework enabled us to develop a comprehensive, systems-level understanding of the impact of the pandemic on service delivery, user experience and staff wellbeing, and place it within the context of pre-existing challenges.

Maternity services experienced some impacts on core service coverage, though not on Trust level clinical health outcomes (with the possible exception of readmissions in one Trust). Both users and staff found some pandemic-driven changes challenging such as remote or reduced antenatal and community postnatal contacts, and restrictions on companionship. Other key changes included an increased need for mental health support, changes in the availability and uptake of home birth services and changes in induction procedures. Many emergency adaptations persisted at the end of data collection. Differences between the trusts indicate complex change pathways. Staff reported some removal of bureaucracy, which allowed greater flexibility.

During the first wave of COVID-19 staffing numbers increased, resolving some pre-pandemic shortages: however, by October 2021 they declined markedly. Trying to maintain the quality and availability of services had marked negative consequences for personnel. Timely routine clinical and staffing data were not always available and personalised care and user and staff experiences were poorly captured.

Conclusions
The COVID-19 crisis magnified pre-pandemic problems and in particular, poor staffing levels. Maintaining services took a significant toll on staff wellbeing. There is some evidence that these pressures are continuing. There was marked variation in Trust responses. Lack of accessible and timely data at Trust and national levels hampered rapid insights. The ASPIRE COVID-19 framework could be useful for modelling the impact of future crises on routine care.
ASPIRE COVID-19, COVID-19, Case study, Crises, Maternal health services, Midwifery, Organisational evaluation framework
1472-6963
Neal, Sarah
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Lucy, Stone
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Gill, Moncrieff
ddaacbe0-9fb3-4e30-a60e-9d5470a1f375
Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55
Carol, Kingdon
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Anastasia, Topalidou
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Balaam, Marie-Clare
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Cordey, Sarah
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Crossland, Nicola
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Feeley, Claire
b4b84eb5-5c36-4272-bfd4-35f46619fa43
Powney, Deborah
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Sarian, Arni
be992118-3725-4ae2-88a5-bc5e41418e51
Fenton, Alan
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Heazell, Alexander
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de Jong, Ank
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Severns, Alexandra
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Thomson, Gill
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Downe, Soo
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Neal, Sarah
2b63ebf7-1cf9-423d-80a2-bd99a759f784
Lucy, Stone
08559782-16da-4a0f-bb4e-5df3c6a56f34
Gill, Moncrieff
ddaacbe0-9fb3-4e30-a60e-9d5470a1f375
Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55
Carol, Kingdon
0184dfe7-de32-47cb-9f34-b7a947936479
Anastasia, Topalidou
1271d2cf-5435-4ae0-9e12-fcd430ed02ae
Balaam, Marie-Clare
a99ae115-aa24-4c0d-a270-7f3959d07b95
Cordey, Sarah
8ba2aa86-ec2c-4866-a8b9-8473cafeb0de
Crossland, Nicola
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Feeley, Claire
b4b84eb5-5c36-4272-bfd4-35f46619fa43
Powney, Deborah
4599e307-93cf-4659-a51a-3edcc301a128
Sarian, Arni
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Fenton, Alan
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Heazell, Alexander
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de Jong, Ank
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Severns, Alexandra
166da2a3-42e6-499a-b3c7-6a8e2c7d8d76
Thomson, Gill
a7a6842d-0137-4160-80c7-0e069b20c488
Downe, Soo
eff63a3f-ff6b-43ef-82e2-5f406b470abb

Neal, Sarah, Lucy, Stone, Gill, Moncrieff, Matthews, Zoe, Carol, Kingdon, Anastasia, Topalidou, Balaam, Marie-Clare, Cordey, Sarah, Crossland, Nicola, Feeley, Claire, Powney, Deborah, Sarian, Arni, Fenton, Alan, Heazell, Alexander, de Jong, Ank, Severns, Alexandra, Thomson, Gill and Downe, Soo (2023) Assessing safe and personalised maternity and neonatal care through a pandemic: a case study of outcomes and experiences in two trusts in England using the ASPIRE COVID-19 framework. BMC Health Services Research, 23 (1), [675]. (doi:10.1186/s12913-023-09669-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in profound and far-reaching impacts on maternal and newborn care and outcomes. As part of the ASPIRE COVID-19 project, we describe processes and outcome measures relating to safe and personalised maternity care in England which we map against a pre-developed ASPIRE framework to establish the potential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic for two UK trusts.

Methods
We undertook a mixed-methods system-wide case study using quantitative routinely collected data and qualitative data from two Trusts and their service users from 2019 to 2021 (start and completion dates varied by available data). We mapped findings to our prior ASPIRE conceptual framework that explains pathways for the impact of COVID-19 on safe and personalised care.

Results
The ASPIRE framework enabled us to develop a comprehensive, systems-level understanding of the impact of the pandemic on service delivery, user experience and staff wellbeing, and place it within the context of pre-existing challenges.

Maternity services experienced some impacts on core service coverage, though not on Trust level clinical health outcomes (with the possible exception of readmissions in one Trust). Both users and staff found some pandemic-driven changes challenging such as remote or reduced antenatal and community postnatal contacts, and restrictions on companionship. Other key changes included an increased need for mental health support, changes in the availability and uptake of home birth services and changes in induction procedures. Many emergency adaptations persisted at the end of data collection. Differences between the trusts indicate complex change pathways. Staff reported some removal of bureaucracy, which allowed greater flexibility.

During the first wave of COVID-19 staffing numbers increased, resolving some pre-pandemic shortages: however, by October 2021 they declined markedly. Trying to maintain the quality and availability of services had marked negative consequences for personnel. Timely routine clinical and staffing data were not always available and personalised care and user and staff experiences were poorly captured.

Conclusions
The COVID-19 crisis magnified pre-pandemic problems and in particular, poor staffing levels. Maintaining services took a significant toll on staff wellbeing. There is some evidence that these pressures are continuing. There was marked variation in Trust responses. Lack of accessible and timely data at Trust and national levels hampered rapid insights. The ASPIRE COVID-19 framework could be useful for modelling the impact of future crises on routine care.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 June 2023
Published date: 22 June 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This research is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, as part of UK Research and Innovation’s rapid response to COVID-19 [grant number ES/V004581/1]. Full details of the main study are available via Research Registry (researchregistry5911) and via UKRI Gateway ( https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=ES%2FV004581%2F1 ). Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: ASPIRE COVID-19, COVID-19, Case study, Crises, Maternal health services, Midwifery, Organisational evaluation framework

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480261
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480261
ISSN: 1472-6963
PURE UUID: 7398d7f8-3099-45ea-b0e5-f5ff96cfbb8c
ORCID for Sarah Neal: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1812-7221
ORCID for Zoe Matthews: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1533-6618

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:13
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:14

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Neal ORCID iD
Author: Stone Lucy
Author: Moncrieff Gill
Author: Zoe Matthews ORCID iD
Author: Kingdon Carol
Author: Topalidou Anastasia
Author: Marie-Clare Balaam
Author: Sarah Cordey
Author: Nicola Crossland
Author: Claire Feeley
Author: Deborah Powney
Author: Arni Sarian
Author: Alan Fenton
Author: Alexander Heazell
Author: Ank de Jong
Author: Alexandra Severns
Author: Gill Thomson
Author: Soo Downe

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