Perinatal Quality Collaboratives

image of a team of doctors with parents holding their infant

About Perinatal Quality Collaboratives

Perinatal quality collaboratives (PQCs) are state or multi-state networks of teams working to improve the quality of care for mothers and babies. PQC members identify health care processes that need to be improved and use the best available methods to make changes as quickly as possible.

PQCs have contributed to important improvements in health care and outcomes for mothers and babies, including:

  • Reductions in deliveries before 39 weeks of pregnancy without a medical reason.
  • Reductions in health care–associated bloodstream infections in newborns.
  • Reductions in severe pregnancy complications.

Many states currently have active collaboratives, and others are in development. Visit State Perinatal Quality Collaboratives to view a list of state-based PQCs.

CDC is currently providing support for state-based PQCs in Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Wisconsin. Funding supports the capabilities of PQCs to improve the quality of perinatal care in their states, including efforts to:

  • Reduce preterm births.
  • Reduce severe pregnancy complications associated with high blood pressure and hemorrhage.
  • Improve identification of and care for infants with neonatal abstinence syndrome.
  • Reduce racial/ethnic and geographic disparities.
  • Reduce cesarean births among low-risk pregnant women.
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