Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis

Background: The referral system plays a crucial role in antenatal care and childbearing by providing access to emergency obstetric care. Excess referral from primary care and bypassing secondary levels of care leads to overcrowding of high risk and normal mothers in tertiary centers. Hence, this stu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: P Prathiba, R Niranjjan, Dilip Kumar Maurya, Subitha Lakshminarayanan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jfmpc.com/article.asp?issn=2249-4863;year=2020;volume=9;issue=1;spage=347;epage=353;aulast=Prathiba
id doaj-56459b23acc84683b2b21de04d85ab98
record_format Article
spelling doaj-56459b23acc84683b2b21de04d85ab982020-11-24T22:00:00ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Family Medicine and Primary Care2249-48632020-01-019134735310.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_836_19Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysisP PrathibaR NiranjjanDilip Kumar MauryaSubitha LakshminarayananBackground: The referral system plays a crucial role in antenatal care and childbearing by providing access to emergency obstetric care. Excess referral from primary care and bypassing secondary levels of care leads to overcrowding of high risk and normal mothers in tertiary centers. Hence, this study aims to assess the gaps in the referral of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care. Methodology: In this hospital-based descriptive study, all obstetric patients referred to the Obstetric emergency facility and admitted in postnatal wards during the study period were included. They were interviewed using a pretested questionnaire. Data entry was performed using EpiData version 3.1 and analysis was done using SPSS version 22 software. Results: Of the 505 eligible women who attended the facility, 286 (56%) were referred from other institutions, while 44% were self-referred. Among those referred, one-third were from tertiary level facility and 40% from primary care facility. More than half of the referral was through verbal communication to the patient (60%); only one-third had referral slips. Around 40.4% chose bus and private vehicles (37.6%) as their means of transport; only around 10% traveled in 108 ambulances. Conclusions: Measures to improve the capacity building at primary setting, hierarchy of referral, quality of documentation, and emergency transport mechanism for obstetric patients are vital. The deficits identified in the existing referral system will be useful to give feedback to the health systems of the neighboring regions on emergency obstetrics referrals and to propose referral guidelines.http://www.jfmpc.com/article.asp?issn=2249-4863;year=2020;volume=9;issue=1;spage=347;epage=353;aulast=Prathibaemergenciesobstetric deliveryprimary carereferral and consultationtertiary care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P Prathiba
R Niranjjan
Dilip Kumar Maurya
Subitha Lakshminarayanan
spellingShingle P Prathiba
R Niranjjan
Dilip Kumar Maurya
Subitha Lakshminarayanan
Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
emergencies
obstetric delivery
primary care
referral and consultation
tertiary care
author_facet P Prathiba
R Niranjjan
Dilip Kumar Maurya
Subitha Lakshminarayanan
author_sort P Prathiba
title Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
title_short Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
title_full Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
title_fullStr Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
title_full_unstemmed Referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: A gap analysis
title_sort referral chain of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care: a gap analysis
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
issn 2249-4863
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Background: The referral system plays a crucial role in antenatal care and childbearing by providing access to emergency obstetric care. Excess referral from primary care and bypassing secondary levels of care leads to overcrowding of high risk and normal mothers in tertiary centers. Hence, this study aims to assess the gaps in the referral of patients with obstetric emergency from primary care to tertiary care. Methodology: In this hospital-based descriptive study, all obstetric patients referred to the Obstetric emergency facility and admitted in postnatal wards during the study period were included. They were interviewed using a pretested questionnaire. Data entry was performed using EpiData version 3.1 and analysis was done using SPSS version 22 software. Results: Of the 505 eligible women who attended the facility, 286 (56%) were referred from other institutions, while 44% were self-referred. Among those referred, one-third were from tertiary level facility and 40% from primary care facility. More than half of the referral was through verbal communication to the patient (60%); only one-third had referral slips. Around 40.4% chose bus and private vehicles (37.6%) as their means of transport; only around 10% traveled in 108 ambulances. Conclusions: Measures to improve the capacity building at primary setting, hierarchy of referral, quality of documentation, and emergency transport mechanism for obstetric patients are vital. The deficits identified in the existing referral system will be useful to give feedback to the health systems of the neighboring regions on emergency obstetrics referrals and to propose referral guidelines.
topic emergencies
obstetric delivery
primary care
referral and consultation
tertiary care
url http://www.jfmpc.com/article.asp?issn=2249-4863;year=2020;volume=9;issue=1;spage=347;epage=353;aulast=Prathiba
work_keys_str_mv AT pprathiba referralchainofpatientswithobstetricemergencyfromprimarycaretotertiarycareagapanalysis
AT rniranjjan referralchainofpatientswithobstetricemergencyfromprimarycaretotertiarycareagapanalysis
AT dilipkumarmaurya referralchainofpatientswithobstetricemergencyfromprimarycaretotertiarycareagapanalysis
AT subithalakshminarayanan referralchainofpatientswithobstetricemergencyfromprimarycaretotertiarycareagapanalysis
_version_ 1725846001232642048