The Safe Assessment Form to Evaluate Risks (‘SAFER’) chart – a clinical practice evaluation study following introduction of electronic risk identification in pregnancies in Scotland

DOI: 10.3310/nihropenres.13791.1 Publication Date: 2025-04-23T15:10:07Z
ABSTRACT
Background It is easy to overlook risk factors that require specific healthcare actions. This is particularly true in maternity care, which deals with a natural process where risk might be distinguished from normality at many points in the care pathway. In this paper, we describe the effects of clinical decision support, first in the form of paper checklists and then in the form of an electronic checklist to screen for risks of (1) venous thromboembolism (VTE), (2) intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), (3) high body mass index (BMI), and (4) gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). Here, we track the effects of different screening algorithms introduced on different media (paper versus computer). Methods We screened sequential maternity records at three time points: baseline, following the introduction of a paper checklist, and following the introduction of the electronic system. First, we examined (at each time-point) the proportion of pregnancies appropriately screened at each time point. Second, we examined the proportion of correct actions taken following a positive screening result. The study was conducted at a District General Hospital in Scotland between 2011 and 2015, which covered the introduction of the above system to screen patients and suggest appropriate management for positive cases. Results We found that the introduction of a paper checklist was associated with an increased proportion of pregnancies appropriately screened and correct actions taken contingent on positive screening. These trends continued after the introduction of the electronic prompts. Conclusions Compliance with maternity guideline recommendations for VTE, high BMI, high risk of fetal growth restriction, and GDM improved over time with the introduction of paper and electronic prompts. Tweetable abstract Electronic maternity screening is significantly superior to no screening or paper-based screening for VTE, BMI and GDM. Data Sharing Statement Nil additional unpublished data from the study are available.
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