Mortality and Morbidities Among Very Premature Infants Admitted After Hours in an Australian Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Network

Author:

Abdel-Latif Mohamed E.12,Bajuk Barbara3,Oei Julee12,Lui Kei12,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Newborn Care, Royal Hospital for Women, New South Wales, Australia

2. School of Women's and Children's Heath, University of New South Wales, New South Wales, Australia

3. Neonatal Intensive Care Units Data Collection, New South Wales Centre for Perinatal Health Services Research, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

OBJECTIVES. To assess risk-adjusted early (within 7 days) mortality and major morbidities of newborn infants at <32 weeks' gestation who are admitted after office hours to a regional Australian network of NICUs where statewide caseload is coordinated and staffed by on-floor registrars working in shift rosters. We hypothesize that adverse sequelae are increased in these infants. DESIGNS. We conducted a database review of the records of infants (n = 8654) at <32 weeks' gestation admitted to a network of 10 tertiary NICUs in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory from 1992 to 2002. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed to adjust for case-mix and significant baseline characteristics. OUTCOMES. Sixty-five percent of infants were admitted to the NICUs after hours. These infants did not have an increase in early neonatal mortality or major neonatal sequelae compared with their office-hours counterparts. Admissions during late night hours after midnight or fatigue risk periods before the end of a medical 12-hour shift were not associated with higher early mortality. Risk factors significantly predictive of early neonatal death were lack of antenatal steroid treatment, Apgar score <7 at 5 minutes, male gender, gestation age, and being small for gestation. CONCLUSIONS. Current staffing levels, specialization, and networking are associated with lower circadian variation in adverse outcomes and after-hours admission to this NICU network and have no significant impact on early neonatal mortality and morbidity.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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