Management of neonatal hypoglycaemia in a tertiary maternity unit—A multidisciplinary quality improvement project

Author:

Garvey Aisling1ORCID,Kearney Avril1,Kasha Sarah1,Dafalla Ibrahim1,Moore Shirley1,Wall Hilda1,Curley Anna12

Affiliation:

1. Neonatology National Maternity Hospital Dublin Ireland

2. School of Medicine University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

Abstract

AbstractAimImproved identification and treatment of infants at risk of hypoglycaemia using evidence‐based guidelines.MethodsDesign: Prospective, multidisciplinary quality improvement project (QIP). Setting: Tertiary maternity hospital, Dublin (2016–2023). Subjects: Infants at risk for neonatal hypoglycaemia. Intervention: Plan‐Do‐Study‐Act methodology. A hospital‐wide survey and ongoing audit informed our initiatives including staff education, antenatal maternal education and standardisation of equipment. Our guidelines were continually evaluated and updated based on emerging evidence. Main outcome measures: Neonatal unit (NNU) admissions, adherence to guidelines and use of glucose gel.ResultsNNU admissions decreased by 70%, from 3% (118/3883) to 0.9% (34/3806 infants). The number requiring an IV glucose bolus reduced from 25% (29/118) to 6% (2/34). Improved antenatal education, antenatal expression of colostrum and early and frequent feeding also contributed to a reduction in glucose gel use of 94% (1009 tubes in 2018‐v‐62 in 2022). There were no adverse side effects related to hypoglycaemia.ConclusionOur QIP resulted in a significant reduction in NNU admissions leading to significant cost reductions and NNU workload. More importantly, this resulted in less maternal–infant separation and potentially less parental anxiety and a more supportive environment for breastfeeding. These low‐cost initiatives can be implemented in other tertiary maternity hospitals to improve maternity and newborn care.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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