# Retrospective Cohort Study of Low‐Value Hysterectomy Before and After Publication of the National Heavy Bleeding Clinical Care Standard in Regional Victoria

**Authors:** Natasha Daureen Frawley, Madison Phung, Benjamin Harrap

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/ajr.70049 · The Australian Journal of Rural Health · 2025-04-25

## TL;DR

This study examined whether a clinical care standard reduced low-value hysterectomies in a regional Victorian hospital before and after its publication in 2017.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the impact of a national clinical care standard on hysterectomy practices in a regional hospital setting.

## Key findings

- Low-value hysterectomy rates did not significantly change after the standard's publication.
- Compliance with the HMB Standard showed mixed results.
- Uptake of alternatives to hysterectomy remained low.

## Abstract

To evaluate the prevalence of low‐value care hysterectomy before and after publication of the National Heavy Menstrual Bleeding Clinical Care Standard (HMB Standard) in a regional Victorian hospital. The secondary aim was to assess whether compliance with the HMB Standard improved.

Retrospective cohort design. All patients booked for a planned benign hysterectomy were included. Manual chart review was undertaken for demographics, surgical planning, procedure, and outcomes to 28 days.

A single regional Victorian hospital within an area identified to be high volume for benign hysterectomy.

Patients who planned benign hysterectomy in the 10 months prior (Group 1—Control) and 10 months after (Group 2—Post‐intervention) publication of the HMB Standard in October 2017.

Low‐value hysterectomy was defined as the proportion of benign hysterectomies performed via the abdominal route in the absence of cancer or a previous caesarean section.

There were 64 patients in Group 1 and 60 in Group 2 included. Low‐value hysterectomy proportion had a non‐significant change from 9.4% in Group 1 to 11.7% in Group 2, 95% confidence interval = [−0.1303, 0.0857]. Compliance to the HMB Standard had mixed results.

There was no clinically significant change in low‐value hysterectomy in the 10 months following publication of the HMB Standard, compared to 10 months prior, in a regional Victorian hospital. Uptake of therapeutic alternatives to hysterectomy was low.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Bleeding (MESH:D006470), cancer (MESH:D009369), Menstrual Bleeding (MESH:D008595)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12023707/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12023707