1 / 6

Outreach Midwifery Service within a GP Practice Presenter: Lyn Wardlaw Hospital: Lynx

Outreach Midwifery Service within a GP Practice Presenter: Lyn Wardlaw Hospital: Lynx. 28 May 2009- Melbourne. KEY PROBLEM. High number of women unbooked, no transport and difficult to contact in particular areas within our DHB catchments Women had either no AN Care or very little

mayes
Télécharger la présentation

Outreach Midwifery Service within a GP Practice Presenter: Lyn Wardlaw Hospital: Lynx

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Outreach Midwifery Servicewithin a GP PracticePresenter: Lyn WardlawHospital: Lynx 28 May 2009- Melbourne

  2. KEY PROBLEM • High number of women unbooked, no transport and difficult to contact in particular areas within our DHB catchments • Women had either no AN Care or very little • High deprivation domicile code and/or with a high Maori population • No Independent Midwives in these communities

  3. AIM OF THIS PROJECT • Improve access for all women within our DHB catchments • These communities were either urban and/or rural remote • Otangarei • Ruakaka • Kaeo including the east bays on east coast of North Island • Immediate implementation to access required for women to ensure AN care was provided • Midwifery led within a GP Practice

  4. KEY CHANGES IMPLEMENTED • Rotated an employed Midwife to conduct AN care within the GP Practice to those areas defined on a rotational basis (6-9mthly) • Previously 10-12 women per month from Otangarei received either nil or insufficient AN Care • May 2009 the Midwife books on average 5 women per month and are providing AN Care up to 10-15 per month.

  5. OUTCOMES SO FAR • Exceeded our expectations and improved the women’s access to AN Care led by a Midwife including other services' Social Worker, Maori health providers and their GP and Nurses within that practice • Underestimated the level of unmet need • Women can walk to and from Clinic • Drop in service – no appointment needed • Health Service – Maori health provider transports women for other services – eg scanning, obstetric clinics • Positive feedback form women and their whanau as they know when the clinic is on in their communities. • Word of mouth referrals very common • Underprivileged women feel valued

  6. PROJECT EVALUATION • Otangarei was our initial community to trial this initiative and we have now moved into Ruakaka and putting together this project into Kaeo • KNOW YOUR COMMUNITY AND IT’S NEEDS!

More Related