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A study looking at the experiences of families and health care professionals following incidents involving NHS maternity care highlights critical factors for improving communication with families. The team, which included family and charity representatives as well as academics, hopes the findings from the study will drive improvements in open in a way that best supports both families and health care professionals. Open disclosure is when the NHS informs families that the care it has provided has directly caused harm.

Open disclosure should provide patients and families with honest answers and ensure learn from mistakes to prevent them from happening again.1 The study, called DISCERN, aimed to understand whether NHS maternity services in England involved families in investigations and reviews surrounding incidents and how this was done, what worked well, what didn't work well and why. The findings were outlined in a report in .



Building on hypotheses from , the new report identifies five critical factors to improve open disclosure in maternity care following incidents that caused harm or death to the baby or woman: The study was co-led by Mary Adams, Visiting Senior Research Fellow, and Jane Sandall CBE, Professor of Social Science and Women's Health, from King's College London, and carried out with collaborators at King's, Sands (the stillbirth and neonatal death charity), BirthRights, the University of Manchester and the Birth Trauma Association. Learning from parents, families and health care professionals There has been a push within the UK's NHS maternity services to improve open disclosure with affected families, but there is little evidence of how effective these interventions are and how practice can be improved. The was carried out over three years and in three phases.

In the first phase, the team reviewed documents related to safety, incidents, harm, reviews and investigations in maternity care, and conducted interviews with stakeholders and families. In the second phase, the team conducted of three maternity services. This involved interviewing staff and families, and observing staff and family meetings, and informal unit and office activities surrounding open disclosure.

The third phase focused on interpretation of these findings in family, clinician and manager forums to develop actions to drive improvements. "The most important people to involve in these investigations are the parents, they have to be central to the whole picture. Without their perspectives of what happened, we'd never be able to learn, and to change care for other families," said a health care professional who was interviewed as part of the study.

The team concluded that there is a need for: "What we found was that in these NHS trusts, good practice surrounding open disclosure wasn't systemic, but dependent on staff members' ability to have, and experience with having, difficult conversations with families. The key issue is how do we make these processes part of standard care, and how can we best support staff to have these difficult conversations," said Professor Sandall, Professor of Social Science and Women's Health at King's College London. As part of the DISCERN study, the team has created a film intended to improve staff awareness of what is important to families and how interventions can be improved.

The film focuses on areas of good practice in open disclosure and draws on the experiences of families and staff involved in incidences of harm the team heard from. "This thought provoking and incisive animation is a 'must watch' for all health care professionals working in the maternity services. It captures the emotional turmoil of families who have suffered harm, in their own words.

It explores the feelings of who must navigate the difficult challenge of disclosing the harm in a way that does not add to the family's trauma. "Used in training and education it will go a long way to preventing even further emotional harm to all those involved in these incidents," said Maureen Treadwell, co-founder of the Birth Trauma Association. Adams, M.

A. et al., Strengthening open disclosure in maternity services in the English NHS: the DISCERN realist evaluation study, (2024).

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