Journal of Clinical and Translational Science (Jan 2025)

Meaningfulness, feasibility, and usability of quality-of-care measures for maternal and infant health: A structured mixed-methods review

  • Ryan P. Theis,
  • Rahma S. Mkuu,
  • Hannah Marmol,
  • Lauren Silva,
  • Callie Reeder,
  • Jessica Bahorski,
  • Erica Smith,
  • John C. Smulian,
  • Tony S. Wen,
  • Amanda Redinger,
  • Tabresha Blake,
  • Elizabeth A. Shenkman,
  • Dominick J. Lemas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2024.681
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives: Improving access to and quality of maternal and infant healthcare are important leverage points to address worsening maternal and infant health disparities in the USA. This study evaluates the comprehensiveness of existing maternal and infant quality-of-care measures to identify aspects of quality that need greater attention in quality measurement. Study design: We conducted a structured, team-based qualitative review of 88 maternal and infant health measures indexed by the National Quality Forum (NQF), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), and the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). We assessed discrete elements relevant to meaningfulness, feasibility, and usability following AHRQ National Quality Strategy (NQS) criteria, with input from researcher, clinician, and citizen scientist investigators. Descriptive statistics on coded measures were calculated using SPSS. Results: The most common AHRQ NQS priorities addressed were mortality (60%) and safety (48%). Average scores across elements were 59% for feasibility, 61% for practice usability, and 31% for policy usability. Fewer measures addressed coordination, affordability, or patient engagement in the postpartum period. Only 23% of measures were endorsed by NQF, only 17% of measures had publicly available benchmarks, and only 14% had specifications updated in the year prior to review. Conclusions: Findings from this study can inform the specification of a comprehensive, updated system for maternal and infant quality-of-care evaluation and can facilitate the development of new quality-of-care measures that address underrepresented maternal and infant health issues.

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