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Blueprint for Action: Steps Toward a High-Quality, High-Value Maternity Care SystemCreating the Transforming Maternity Care "Blueprint for Action"Childbirth Connection's Transforming Maternity Care project engaged diverse stakeholders from across the U.S. health care system to set a path toward a high-performing maternity care system. The project responds to poor national performance on widely recognized maternal and newborn indicators, gaps between practice patterns and lessons from best scientific evidence, and unwarranted costs. It advances the core health care reform aims of improved quality and value within a major sector of the health care system (see U.S. maternity care fact sheet)."Blueprint for Action: Steps Toward a High-Quality, High-Value Maternity Care System" (2010) is the result of a structured process for capturing expertise and experiences of diverse stakeholders and fostering big leaps forward in maternity care quality improvement (see diagram [PDF] and summary of Transforming Maternity Care process). Within this process, a multi-stakeholder Vision Team developed the "2020 Vision for a High-Quality, High-Value Health Care System." Five stakeholder workgroups were then convened to identify priority actions that their sector should undertake to move expeditiously toward the envisioned system. Workgroup chairs presented their reports at an invitational multi-stakeholder symposium in Washington DC, where invited discussants and audience members collaborated to strengthen the analysis and recommendations. After the symposium, workgroups finalized the stakeholder workgroup reports, which are published on this website. The Transforming Maternity Care Steering Committee synthesized the workgroup reports and additional feedback into its "Blueprint for Action." The "2020 Vision," "Blueprint for Action," summary of symposium proceedings, and companion documents are freely available in a special Transforming Maternity Care issue of Women's Health Issues (January 2010). Many individuals and groups have begun to explore or actively work on implementing specific Blueprint recommendations. (Those who wish to learn more about specific recommendations and perhaps become active in implementing them should understand that the stakeholder workgroup reports provide much greater specificity and detail than the Blueprint.) "Blueprint for Action" content areasThe "Blueprint for Action" includes analysis and recommendations in the following 11 focal areas, with 3 or 4 major recommendations in each focal area:
Transforming Maternity Care Steering Committee issued "Blueprint for Action"The Steering Committee contributed immeasurably to the success of the Transforming Maternity Care project, from planning to the development and release of the direction-setting "Blueprint for Action." Expertise on the Steering Committee included diverse essential viewpoints such as community/public health, consumer and employer advocacy, family medicine, general obstetrics and gynecology, health administration, health care quality improvement, health education, health policy, health system administration, labor support, maternal-fetal medicine, maternity nursing, Medicaid administration, nurse-midwifery, patient safety, and quality and measurement research in health care.The following individuals served on the Steering Committee and issued the "Blueprint for Action":
Childbirth Connection expresses its appreciation to members of the Steering Committee for their exceptional contributions to the Transforming Maternity Care project. Most recent page update: 4/28/2010
© 2010 Childbirth Connection. All rights reserved.
Childbirth Connection is a national not-for-profit organization founded in 1918 as Maternity Center Association. Our mission is to improve the quality of maternity care through research, education, advocacy and policy. Childbirth Connection promotes safe, effective and satisfying evidence-based maternity care and is a voice for the needs and interests of childbearing families. |
News and Features : Health Professionals
New VBAC Guidlines
ACOG has just issued new Guidlines for VBAC. What changed? What continues? We've Moved!
On July 1, 2010, the Childbirth Connection office moved to 260 Madison Avenue, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10016. All other contact information is unchanged. "2020 Vision" and "Blueprint for Action" Reports Available
Rising Maternal Mortality
Help Transform Maternity Care! Please join our efforts to make quality maternity care a top national priority. Your support will help make the transformation possible. View 2010 Supporter Roster
Updated Maternity Care Statistics Available
US Cochrane Center (USCC)/Consumers United for Evidence-based Healthcare (CUE)
New Mothers Speak Out National Report Released The latest report in Childbirth Connection's Listening to Mothers series is now available. Get an eye-opening look at the reality of life as a mother of young children in the United States, based on national surveys conducted by Harris Interactive. Learn more, get the report Read the Wall Street Journal story and listen to the podcast ![]() Download Quick Facts (PDF) ![]() Why does the national U.S. c-section rate keep going up? Current research points to an optimal cesarean section rate of 5% to 10%, but 1 pregnant woman in 3 is giving birth by major surgery in the United States. Why the surge and is this safe? A new page - and a PDF handout for journalists, policy makers, students and others - answer these questions. Read more about the rising cesarean section rate ![]() New Content!
March/April 2009 evidence column is now available.
Features: National Quality Forum endorses consensus perinatal performance measures; systematic reviews on induction of labor, environmental tobacco smoke and fetal health, and HPV infection and cervical neoplasia Get the column ![]() Popular Pages
![]() Comfort in Labor, by Penny Simkin Penny Simkin, the internationally recognized leader in childbirth education and labor support, shares her wisdom with women, including comfort measures, effective positions, and tips for partners and doulas. Download Comfort in Labor (free PDF)
Every woman has the right to receive maternity care that is appropriate to her cultural and religious background, and to receive information in a language in which she can communicate.
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