Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care

BackgroundEffective care dearth in USA healthcare systems can be augmented by patient engagement and shared decision-making (SDM). These effective care strategies can facilitate medical abortion follow-up care (ensuring patients are not experiencing a continuing pregnancy) and follow-up options acce...

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Main Author: Erin Fagot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-03-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/9/1/e000740.full
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spelling doaj-f97761a2895a4960908cfd05898c22732020-11-25T02:48:51ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412020-03-019110.1136/bmjoq-2019-000740Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up careErin Fagot0Frontier Nursing University, Hyden, Kentucky, USABackgroundEffective care dearth in USA healthcare systems can be augmented by patient engagement and shared decision-making (SDM). These effective care strategies can facilitate medical abortion follow-up care (ensuring patients are not experiencing a continuing pregnancy) and follow-up options access.Local problemThe quality improvement project clinic had a state-mandated waiting period, requiring additional visits. This delayed care for all abortion patients, creating travel, and cost barriers. The clinic had some of the lowest medical abortion follow-up rates out of its entire national network.MethodsFour ‘Plan-Do-Study-Act’ (PDSA) cycles built on clinical changes, implementing an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality serum human chorionic gonadotropin guideline. Medical abortion patient cohort size doubled during each PDSA cycle.InterventionsThrough four interventions (team engagement, patient engagement, Beta follow-up and contraception SDM), standardised follow-up care was integrated into clinic workflow with contraception SDM tools and an Option Grid.ResultsMost intervention measures were successful, with staff offering follow-up options counselling to all medical abortion patients by the end of the project. The Beta follow-up rate (84%) was higher than the overall follow-up rate (52%–73%), but the goal of a 92% overall follow-up rate was not met. Contraception SDM streamlined counselling but long-acting reversible contraception insertion rates did not increase.ConclusionsEffective care enabled the majority of medical abortion patients to choose Beta follow-up as their preferred follow-up method, especially those with a travel barrier. Beta follow-up gives assurance to close the follow-up gap over time.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/9/1/e000740.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erin Fagot
spellingShingle Erin Fagot
Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
BMJ Open Quality
author_facet Erin Fagot
author_sort Erin Fagot
title Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
title_short Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
title_full Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
title_fullStr Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
title_full_unstemmed Closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
title_sort closing the gap: actualising shared decision-making through effective medication abortion patient follow-up care
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Quality
issn 2399-6641
publishDate 2020-03-01
description BackgroundEffective care dearth in USA healthcare systems can be augmented by patient engagement and shared decision-making (SDM). These effective care strategies can facilitate medical abortion follow-up care (ensuring patients are not experiencing a continuing pregnancy) and follow-up options access.Local problemThe quality improvement project clinic had a state-mandated waiting period, requiring additional visits. This delayed care for all abortion patients, creating travel, and cost barriers. The clinic had some of the lowest medical abortion follow-up rates out of its entire national network.MethodsFour ‘Plan-Do-Study-Act’ (PDSA) cycles built on clinical changes, implementing an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality serum human chorionic gonadotropin guideline. Medical abortion patient cohort size doubled during each PDSA cycle.InterventionsThrough four interventions (team engagement, patient engagement, Beta follow-up and contraception SDM), standardised follow-up care was integrated into clinic workflow with contraception SDM tools and an Option Grid.ResultsMost intervention measures were successful, with staff offering follow-up options counselling to all medical abortion patients by the end of the project. The Beta follow-up rate (84%) was higher than the overall follow-up rate (52%–73%), but the goal of a 92% overall follow-up rate was not met. Contraception SDM streamlined counselling but long-acting reversible contraception insertion rates did not increase.ConclusionsEffective care enabled the majority of medical abortion patients to choose Beta follow-up as their preferred follow-up method, especially those with a travel barrier. Beta follow-up gives assurance to close the follow-up gap over time.
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/9/1/e000740.full
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