Developing Patient-Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) and Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) for Maternity Care in Australia: A Study Protocol
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Background
With some of the lowest global perinatal mortality rates, Australia is one of the safest countries to give birth. Despite impressive outcomes in clinical care, the prevalence of birth trauma, mistreatment and disrespect in maternity care has been the subject of much scrutiny. There are no nationally standardized reporting measures to indicate whether care provided during the critical and transformative period of childbearing meets the health and wellbeing needs of those giving birth. Recent reviews of maternity Patient-Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) and Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) worldwide indicate current tools are of poor quality and lack consumer co-design. This protocol describes the first phase of the Measuring what Matters to Australian Mothers (MMAMs) study, to develop consumer co-designed PREMs and PROMs for maternity care in Australia.
Methods
A four-step multi-methods approach will be adopted for tool development. (i) A rapid literature review and thematic synthesis of existing maternity PREMs and PROMs tools will inform mapping of domains, dimensions and items across the maternity care continuum to develop a conceptual survey framework. (ii) Multiple rounds of iterative consultation with expert maternity care consumers and maternity healthcare and policy experts will refine the conceptual framework. (iii) A three-round modified e-Delphi study will be undertaken with a minimum n=50 maternity care consumers and n=50 health professionals to identify the priority items for inclusion in a maternity care PREM and PROM. (iv) Cognitive focus group interviews with maternity care consumers will assess the PREM and PROM tools for overall relevance, comprehensibility, and comprehensiveness. This approach will result in a draft set of PREMs and PROMs that will be piloted and validated across a nationally representative sample of maternity care consumers in Australia in phase two of the MMAMs study.
Discussion
This study will develop world-first consumer co-designed maternity care PREMs and PROMs. Following tool development outlined here, piloting, psychometric validation, and implementation planning phases will be undertaken. These tools will provide practical, brief and broad indicators of health quality, enabling benchmarking and improvements in the value and quality of person-centered maternity care at an individual, service and system level across Australia.