Louisville Medicine Volume 64 Issue 1, | Page 11

LOUISVILLE REINSTITUTES FETAL MORTALITY REVIEW Larry Griffin, MD and Sarah Moyer, MD, MPH I n March, Louisville reinstituted its Fetal Infant Mortality Review (FIMR) Program after the process had lapsed for several years. FIMR strives to reduce fetal and infant death in the community by examining the psychosocial causes of those deaths and undertaking systemic change to prevent future deaths. specific individual cases. FIMR is a community-based, action-oriented initiative that enhances the health and well-being of women, infants and families through the review of fetal and infant death. With the FIMR, we attempt to understand how a wide array of social, economic, health, educational, environmental and safety issues relate to infant loss on a local level. In turn, we hope to utilize that information to improve community resources and systems of care to reduce fetal and infant mortality. The FIMR case review team never sees the actual medical record. Instead, FIMR staff abstract a standard set of information of each case. An interview with the mother is conducted to discover psychosocial and economic issues and barriers to care affecting the family during pregnancy and the first year of the child’s life. The purpose of the FIMR review is to look for ways to improve service systems and resources for women and families and to address gaps in care and to understand how psychosocial and economic issues affect outcomes. The FIMR process has entirely different goals and methods from hospital or physician peer reviews. FIMR is aimed at improving broad community social health conditions for mothers and babies, not at determining who is responsible for negative outcomes in Whereas hospital peer review committees are composed of personnel from the facility that provides health care and examine actual medical records with identifiers in place to determine the adequacy of the management of the case or individual physicians who have privileges at the hospital, FIMR case reviews are confidential and materials are de-identified before they are reviewed. The names of physicians, hospitals and other institutions are removed from the case. Much of the FIMR case review involves examining family circumstances or psychosocial issues impacting the health of the baby and mother. THE FIMR PROCESS The FIMR process consists of five components: grief and bereaveJUNE 2016 9