Summary
**Update 03/05/2019: This update retrospectively adds the Quality Improvement Metrics file previously not published for this month.
Please note that the Executive Summary PDF file has also been replaced since the file was originally published.
The update corrects an error in Annex 2 where the original file incorrectly compared MSDS data to 2016/17 HES data rather than the more up to date 2017/18 as intended. This error affected the annex only. No other files or measures were affected.**
This is a report on NHS-funded maternity services in England for November 2018, using data submitted to the Maternity Services Data Set (MSDS). The MSDS has been developed to help achieve better outcomes of care for mothers, babies and children. The MSDS is a patient-level 'secondary uses' data set that re-uses clinical and operational data for purposes other than direct patient care, such as commissioning and clinical audit. It captures key information at each stage of the maternity service care pathway in NHS-funded maternity services, such as those provided by GP practices and hospitals. The data collected include mother's demographics, booking appointments, admissions and re-admissions, screening tests, labour and delivery along with baby's demographics, diagnoses and screening tests. The following analysis files are published within the zip file 'Additional experimental analysis using MSDS data' for the relevant month due to low data quality and completeness:
• Delivery method by previous births
• Delivery method by Robson group
• Smoking status at delivery (for births one month earlier)
• Postpartum haemorrhage and other maternal critical incidents (for births one month earlier)
• Antenatal pathway level
• Births without intervention.
These statistics are classified as experimental and should be used with caution. Experimental statistics are new official statistics undergoing evaluation. More information about experimental statistics can be found on the UK Statistics Authority website.
Key Facts
This report contains key information based on the submissions that have been made by providers and will focus on data relating to activity that occurred in November 2018.
· For November 2018 data, 130 providers successfully submitted data for the MSDS and 2 providers did not submit data. We are working closely with providers who did not respond and expect coverage and data quality to increase over time.
· Among women that had a booking appointment in November 2018, 58 per cent were within the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. This varied across regions with the highest proportion (64 per cent) of women having appointments in the first 10 weeks in the South West Commissioning Region and the lowest proportion (51 per cent) in the London Commissioning Region.
· At the time of their booking appointment, 12 per cent of women with a recorded smoking status were smokers, and 83 per cent were non-smokers. The remaining 5 per cent were recorded as ‘Unknown’.
· Of the births that had a recorded delivery method, 57 per cent were spontaneous vaginal births, 11 per cent had instrumental assistance, 14 per cent were elective caesarean sections and 16 per cent were emergency caesarean sections. The proportion of births by emergency caesarean was highest in the London Commissioning Region (19 per cent) and lowest in the South West Commissioning Region (14 per cent).
· NICE recommend skin-to-skin contact to promote breastfeeding initiation among women that gave birth at 37 weeks gestation or later, 82 per cent had skin-to-skin contact with their baby within one hour of birth.
· 75 per cent of babies received maternal or donor breast milk as their first feed.
Administrative Sources
Maternity Services Data Set (MSDS): this is a patient-level data set that captures information about activity carried out by Maternity Services relating to a mother and baby(s), from the point of the first booking appointment until mother and baby(s) are discharged from maternity services. This is a secondary uses data set, which re-uses clinical and operational data for purposes other than direct patient care.
Last edited: 3 May 2019 2:54 pm