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Series Description: ACOG Foundation’s Quality in Action Patient Safety Organization offers a collection of timely, educational sessions focused on quality improvement and patient safety topics across obstetrics and gynecology care.
Optimizing Nurse Driven Protocols for OBGYN Care
April 9, 2026
Courtney Martin, DO, MHA, FACOG; Daisy Ramos, MSN, C-EFM, RNC-OB, PHN; Caitlin Soyring, MSN, RNC-OB, C-EFM
Nurse-driven protocols have the potential to transform obstetric and gynecologic care delivery. When thoughtfully designed, operationalized, and sustained, these protocols empower nurses to initiate timely interventions, standardize care, and support early recognition of maternal complications. This session highlights real-world examples and practical strategies for building and implementing nurse-driven workflows across diverse care settings.
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Series Description: A deep dive into clinical topics related to quality improvement, patient safety, and measurement held in a 2-session format:
Bridging the Gaps: Advancing Severe Maternal Morbidity Measurement, Quality Improvement, and Trauma-Informed Care
April 16, 2026
Andreea Creanga, MD, PhD
In this session, participants explored the 2026 committee statement on Measurement and Improvement Strategies for Reduction of Severe Maternal Morbidity (SMM). Our presenter focused on topics including differing SMM definitions and measurement strategies and future directions in SMM measurement, as well as quality improvement strategies to reduce SMM and support patients, families, and staff during and after the event.
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Series Description: Turn research into results. Our journal club helps you dig into the latest literature, share insights, and uncover opportunities for innovation.
Associations Between Implementation of the Collaborative Care Model and Disparities in Prenatal Depression Care
March 31, 2026
Emily S. Miller, MD, MPH
In this journal club session, participants reviewed the article titled “Associations Between Implementation of the Collaborative Care Model and Disparities in Perinatal Depression Care”. This session allowed participants to identify where disparities occur in the perinatal depression pathway, understand how a collaborative care model can standardize care delivery, and interpret how implementation of the collaborative care model was associated with reductions in racial disparities in care delivery.
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