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Obstetric Hemorrhage

Readiness

Every Unit

  • Develop processes for the management of patients with obstetric hemorrhage, including:
    • A designated rapid response team co-led by nursing, obstetrics, and anesthesia with membership appropriate to the facility’s Level of Maternal Care;*
    • A standardized, facility-wide, stage-based obstetric hemorrhage emergency management plan with checklists and escalation policy;*
    • Emergency release and massive transfusion protocols to ensure immediate access to blood products;*
    • A protocol, including education and consent practices, to collaborate with patients who decline blood products, but may accept alternative approaches;* and
    • Review of policies to identify and address organizational root causes of racial and ethnic disparities in outcomes related to the diagnosis, management, and surveillance of obstetric hemorrhage.
  • Maintain a hemorrhage cart or equivalent with supplies, checklists, and instruction cards for devices or procedures where antepartum, laboring, and postpartum patients are located.*
  • Ensure immediate access to first- and second-line hemorrhage medications in a kit or equivalent per the unit’s obstetric hemorrhage emergency management plan.*
  • Conduct interprofessional and interdepartmental team-based drills with timely debriefs that include the use of simulated patients.*

Recognition & Prevention

Every Patient

  • Assess and communicate hemorrhage risk to all team members as clinical conditions change or high-risk conditions are identified; at a minimum, on admission to labor and delivery, during the peripartum period, and on transition to postpartum care.*
  • Measure and communicate cumulative blood loss to all team members, using quantitative approaches.*
  • Actively manage the third stage of labor per department-wide protocols.
  • Provide ongoing education to all patients on obstetric hemorrhage risk and causes, early warning signs, and risk for postpartum complications.*

Response

Every Hemorrhage

  • Utilize a standardized, facility-wide, stage-based, obstetric hemorrhage emergency management plan, with
    checklists and escalation policies for stage-based management of patients with obstetric hemorrhage, including:

    • Advance preparations made based on hemorrhage risk (e.g. cell saver, blood bank notification, etc.)
    • Evaluating patients for etiology of hemorrhage;
    • Use of obstetric rapid response team;
    • Evidence-based medication administration or use of nonpharmacological interventions;* and
    • Appropriate activation of expanded care team and clinical resources as necessary.
  • Provide trauma-informed support for patients, identified support network, and staff for all obstetric hemorrhages, including discussions regarding birth events, follow up care, resources, and appointments.*

Reporting & Systems Learning

Every Unit

  • Establish a culture of multidisciplinary planning, huddles, and post-event debriefs for every obstetric hemorrhage, which identify successes, opportunities for improvement, and action planning for future events.
  • Perform multidisciplinary reviews of serious complications per established facility criteria to identify system issues.*
  • Monitor outcomes and process measures related to obstetric hemorrhage, with disaggregation by race and ethnicity due to known racial and ethnic disparities in obstetric hemorrhage outcomes.
  • Establish processes for data reporting and the sharing of data with the obstetric rapid response team, care providers, and facility stakeholders to inform care and change care systems, as necessary.*

Respectful, Equitable & Supportive Care

Every Unit/Provider/Team Member

  • Include each patient that experienced an obstetric hemorrhage and their identified support network as respected members of and contributors to the multidisciplinary care team and as participants in patient-centered huddles and debriefs.*
  • Engage in open, transparent, and empathetic communication with pregnant and postpartum people and their identified support network to understand diagnoses, options, and treatment plans, including consent regarding blood products and blood product alternatives.*

Patient Safety Bundle Acknowledgements

  • This Patient Safety Bundle was originally developed by the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health in collaboration with Debra Bingham, DrPH, RN; Patricia Fontaine, MD, MS; Dena Goffman, MD; Jed Gorlin, MD; Lisa Kane Low, PhD, CNM; David LaGrew, MD; Barbara Levy, MD; Elliott Main, MD*; Barbara Scavone, MD.
  • This patient safety bundle was revised by Susanna Cohen, CNM, DNP; Dena Goffman, MD; LaShea Haynes, MSN, Med; Lisa Kane Low, PhD, CNM; Susan Kendig, MSN, JD, WHNP; Elliott Main, MD; Kerry O'Brien, MD.
  • The American Academy of Family Physicians, Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies, Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses, California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, Health Resources and Services Administration, Let'sTalkPPCM, Oklahoma Perinatal Quality Improvement Collaborative, and the Society for Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology reviewed and provided feedback on this document.  



© 2021 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Permission is hereby granted for duplication and distribution of this document, in its entirety and without modification, for solely non-commercial activities that are for educational, quality improvement, and patient safety purposes. All other users require written permission from ACOG.

Standardization of health care processes and reduced variation has been shown to improve outcomes and quality of care. This bundle reflects emerging clinical, scientific, and patient safety advances as of the date issued and is subject to change. The information should not be construed as dictating an exclusive course of treatment or procedure to be followed. Although the components of a particular bundle may be adapted to local resources, standardization within an institution is strongly encouraged.