The PEONY (North) Study

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    Does postnatal care for women who had hypertensive disorders of pregnancy reflect the evidence base? A longitudinal qualitative study of women and clinicians in Greater Manchester

  • IRAS ID

    252019

  • Contact name

    Catherine Chmiel

  • Contact email

    catherine.chmiel@mft.nhs.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    1 years, 0 months, 1 days

  • Research summary

    Women who have high blood pressure before, during or after pregnancy are at risk at poorer pregnancy outcomes, including maternal death and premature birth. These women are also at risk of problems related to high blood pressure in future pregnancies, and for some, a longer-term health risk of cerebral vascular disease. Numbers of women experiencing high blood pressure are increasing and despite evidence based guidance to support postnatal care, we do not know if women receive appropriate or evidence informed postnatal care which meets their shorter and longer-term health needs. We want to interview women who had high blood pressure during or immediately following pregnancy who gave birth in 2 Greater Manchester maternity units up to 6 months postnatally. We are also planning to interview relevant clinicians, clinical managers and those who commission maternity services in Greater Manchester to obtain their views on how postnatal services could better reflect the evidence base.

    During our interviews with women we want to explore the level of care women currently receive within the first 6 months of giving birth, including support to manage their own health, extent to which their postnatal care reflects national guidance for postnatal follow up of a range of blood pressure disorders, how plans for care were communicated with them and their views on how services could be revised to promote better outcomes for women and their infants. Women's views and those of the clinicians and commissioners we interview will be used to inform a potential new pathway of care for women giving birth who experience hypertensive disorders in Greater Manchester.

  • REC name

    North East - Newcastle & North Tyneside 2 Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    19/NE/0057

  • Date of REC Opinion

    5 Feb 2019

  • REC opinion

    Favourable Opinion