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Postnatal ER visits within 30 days—Pattern, risk factors and implications for care
Author(s) -
Vikström Anna,
Johansson SvenErik,
Barimani Mia
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.14090
Subject(s) - medicine , childbirth , hospital discharge , emergency department , emergency medicine , health care , pregnancy , pediatrics , obstetrics , nursing , intensive care medicine , economics , biology , economic growth , genetics
Aims and objectives To (i) reveal care‐seeking patterns of emergency room visits within 30 days following childbirth (i.e., identify risk factors that trigger contact with emergency room, visit rate and diagnoses) and (ii) suggest clinical implications for postnatal follow‐up. Design The study had a longitudinal design; it used anonymised data from a county council database on all women in Stockholm County, Sweden, who gave birth in 2013. Methods Descriptive and inferential data analysis methods were used. Cox regression was applied to these variables: age when giving birth, diagnostic codes at birth, care encounters and types (e.g., visits or hospital admissions), day of discharge and care organisation and type. The data covered the period from childbirth through a 30‐day period following discharge from hospital. Results The database contained 28,963 births and 59,202 healthcare or medical care encounters. Of these encounters, 50.3% ( n  = 29,774) were planned visits to hospital postnatal care units within 7 days following discharge and 1.2% ( n  = 681) were admissions to hospitals. Of all women who gave birth, 12.2% ( n  = 3,533) visited the emergency room at least once. The number of visits peaked at day 6 following discharge. These factors significantly increased risk for emergency room visits: caesarean, assisted birth and sphincter injury. Conclusions Emergency room visits occurred most commonly immediately following discharge when there were no routine check‐ups. Greater risk of emergency room visits – following caesareans, assisted childbirths or sphincter injuries – indicated that early support for women with childbirth complications should be improved upon discharge from hospital. Other multiple risk factors for emergency room visits might exist. Relevance to Clinical Practice Many emergency room visits could be prevented through early, more qualified, appropriate follow‐up via maternity care systems and effective midwifery interventions. These initiatives could enhance care continuity and facilitate postpartum recovery.

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