Abstract
Perinatal care has been recognized as an integral part of ensuring quality health care in hospitals, and the focus on perinatal care quality is increasing. The previous hospital literature has focused much attention on measuring and improving quality of care generally, but recently there has been a call for a more comprehensive approach to measuring quality in the perinatal care setting. The perinatal literature is limited in addressing the association between organizational factors and perinatal quality. Using chart audit data for more than 10 000 maternity patients, we used multiple regression analysis to examine the association of organizational factors and perinatal quality of care. Findings show that ownership, setting (location), and hospital policy on infant feeding were statistically significant. Findings suggest that it is important that hospital boards and leaders develop and implement organizational policies to enhance perinatal quality of care.