Severe Hypertension in Pregnancy & Postpartum

Improving Care and Outcomes

Severe Hypertension in Pregnancy & Postpartum

Improving Care and Outcomes

Background

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are a leading cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality in the United States. 15% of births in Oregon are affected by hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. ​(Oregon Center for Health Statistics, 2023)​.

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy increase the risk of short-term complications like seizures and stroke during pregnancy and long-term ones like cardiovascular disease after the pregnancy ends, as well as short and long-term outcomes for newborns. An Oregon Perinatal Collaborative workgroup created a TOOLKIT using the Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health (AIM) bundle and resources from local and national stakeholder groups to support teams with implementation. This toolkit has been organized to support teams across different care settings. Information for pregnant and postpartum women and people, as well as the broader community are also included to increase awareness and develop a community of care for Oregonians.

From June 2024-June 2025, hospital teams across Oregon are participating in a quality initiative to implement the Severe Hypertension in Pregnancy and Postpartum toolkit.

The goal of the hospital initiative is to ensure timely treatment of severe hypertension and reduce severe maternal morbidity among patients with preeclampsia.

Additional stakeholders are engaged to support work outside of hospital maternity units, including clinics, the emergency department and in the community.

Additional Resources

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Key readiness takeaway: Readiness requires teams in maternity/ labor and delivery units, emergency departments, the community (doulas, community midwives, home visiting RN’s, etc), and prenatal/ postpartum/ community clinics to engage and work together effectively. Consider the role you play and how to escalate to a higher level of care when needed.

Key response takeaway: Standardized tools and checklists for each care setting should be readily available/familiar to and used by all team members to support consistent response. Continued monitoring in the postpartum period is increasingly recognized as critical to identify hypertension disorders of pregnancy/postpartum—even in those who did not have any during pregnancy or delivery.

Key reporting and systems learning takeaway: Multiple measures-including outcome and process-as well as a culture of briefing/ debriefing/ case reviews support teams in reporting and systems learning.

Key respectful, equitable and supportive care takeaway: Respectful and equitable care requires attention to communication (verbal and nonverbal), shared decision making and inclusion of the pregnant or postpartum person’s values and goals.

OPC Severe Hypertension Focus Group Report

Content Last Updated: August 19, 2024