This is the sixth report in the New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators series, with a focus on women giving birth and babies born in the 2014 calendar year. The New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators present comparative maternity interventions and outcomes data for pregnant women and their babies by maternity facility and district health board region. These indicators are the result of collaboration between the Ministry of Health and maternity stakeholders representing consumer, midwifery, obstetric, general practice, paediatric and anaesthetic perspectives. In 2011 an expert working group established a set of 12 maternity clinical indicators that could be measured using the available data collections at that time. The expert worki...
This report presents findings on the impact of maternity quality and safety programmes in New Zealan...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Congenital anomalies are amongst the leading causes of fetal and infant mortality and morbidity, yet...
The New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators are the result of collaboration between the Ministry o...
Objective: To examine prospectively multiple indicators of pregnancy health and associations with ad...
A focus on women who gave birth, and the babies who were born, in New Zealand in 2012. Summary In ...
Objective To examine prospectively multiple indicators of pregnancy health and associations with adv...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Background New Zealand has an internationally unique midwife-led maternity system where four out of...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Primary health care and maternity services in New Zealand are delive...
Objective To compare maternal and neonatal birth outcomes and morbidities associated with the intent...
Internationally, a typical model of maternity care is a medically led system with varying levels of ...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
This report presents findings on the impact of maternity quality and safety programmes in New Zealan...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Congenital anomalies are amongst the leading causes of fetal and infant mortality and morbidity, yet...
The New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators are the result of collaboration between the Ministry o...
Objective: To examine prospectively multiple indicators of pregnancy health and associations with ad...
A focus on women who gave birth, and the babies who were born, in New Zealand in 2012. Summary In ...
Objective To examine prospectively multiple indicators of pregnancy health and associations with adv...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Background New Zealand has an internationally unique midwife-led maternity system where four out of...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Primary health care and maternity services in New Zealand are delive...
Objective To compare maternal and neonatal birth outcomes and morbidities associated with the intent...
Internationally, a typical model of maternity care is a medically led system with varying levels of ...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
This report presents findings on the impact of maternity quality and safety programmes in New Zealan...
In this report the New Zealand Child and Youth Epidemiology Service (NZCYES) provides data and infor...
Congenital anomalies are amongst the leading causes of fetal and infant mortality and morbidity, yet...