Missed Nursing Care During Labor and Birth and Exclusive Breast Milk Feeding During Hospitalization for Childbirth.

TitleMissed Nursing Care During Labor and Birth and Exclusive Breast Milk Feeding During Hospitalization for Childbirth.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsSimpson, KRice, Lyndon, A, Spetz, J, Gay, CL, Landstrom, GL
JournalMCN Am J Matern Child Nurs
Volume45
Issue5
Pagination280-288
Date Published2020 Sep/Oct
ISSN1539-0683
KeywordsAdult, Breast Feeding, California, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Labor, Obstetric, Michigan, Milk, Human, New Jersey, Nursing Care, Pregnancy, Surveys and Questionnaires
Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine associations between missed nursing care and nurse staffing during labor and birth, and exclusive breast milk feeding at hospital discharge.

STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Labor and birth nurses in three states were surveyed about missed nursing care and their maternity units' adherence to the AWHONN (2010) nurse staffing guidelines for care during labor and birth, using the Perinatal Misscare Survey. Nursing responses were aggregated to the hospital level and estimated associations between missed nursing care, nurse staffing, and hospitals' exclusive breast milk feeding rates were measured using The Joint Commission's Perinatal Care Measure (PC-05).

RESULTS: Surveys from 512 labor nurses in 36 hospitals were included in the analysis. The mean exclusive breast milk feeding rate was 53% (range 13%-76%). Skin-to-skin care, breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth, and appropriate recovery care were on average occasionally missed (2.33 to 2.46 out of 4; 1 = rarely, 2 = occasionally, 3 = frequently, or 4 = always) and were associated with PC-05 [B(CI) -17.1(-29, -6.3), -17.9(-30.5, -6.2), and -15.4(-28.7, -2.1), respectively]. Adherence with overall staffing guidelines was associated with PC-05 [12.9(3.4, 24.3)]. Missed nursing care was an independent predictor of PC-05 [-14.6(-26.4, -2.7)] in a multilevel model adjusting for staffing guideline adherence, perceived quality, mean age of respondents, and nurse burnout.

CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Exclusive breast milk feeding is a national quality indicator of inpatient maternity care. Nurses have substantial responsibility for direct support of infant feeding during the childbirth hospitalization. These results support exclusive breast milk feeding (PC-05) as a nurse-sensitive quality indicator.

DOI10.1097/NMC.0000000000000644
Alternate JournalMCN Am J Matern Child Nurs
PubMed ID32496351
PubMed Central IDPMC7584724
Grant ListR01 HS025715 / HS / AHRQ HHS / United States