Home Visiting for NICU Graduates: Impacts of Following Baby Back Home

Author:

McKelvey Lorraine M.1,Lewis Kanna N.12,Beavers Jared3,Casey Patrick H.3,Irby Carmen3,Goudie Anthony42

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Family and Preventive Medicine

2. Arkansas Center for Health Improvement, Little Rock, Arkansas

3. Pediatrics, College of Medicine,

4. Department of Health Policy and Management, College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The Following Baby Back Home (FBBH) home visiting program supports families of high-risk low birth weight preterm infants after discharge from a hospital NICU. This study compares the health care use, immunization, and infant mortality rate of low birth weight preterm infants enrolled in FBBH with similar infants not in the program. METHODS From January 2013 to December 2017, 498 children enrolled in FBBH were identified in Arkansas vital statistics records and the Arkansas All-Payer Claims Database. Infants in FBBH were matched with children in a control group on the basis of demographics and medical conditions of the infant. Generalized linear mixed models with double propensity-score adjustment were used to estimate program effects. RESULTS In the first year after discharge and compared with a propensity-score matched cohort of control infants, those enrolled in FBBH were significantly more likely to have higher numbers of medical appointments and more compliant immunization history. The odds of dying in the first year of life for control infants was 4.4 times (95% confidence interval: 1.2–20.7) higher than those managed in the program. CONCLUSIONS A goal of the FBBH home visiting program is to work with parents to educate and support them as they care for their medically fragile infants. We conclude that education and support was instrumental in the infant health care use and outcome differences we observed during the first year of life.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference46 articles.

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3. Infant Health and Development Program for low birth weight, premature infants: program elements, family participation, and child intelligence;Ramey;Pediatrics,1992

4. Parent-infant interaction in neonatal intensive care units: Implications for research and service delivery;Gottwald;Infants Young Child,1990

5. Brief report: birth status, medical complications, and social environment: individual differences in development of preterm, very low birth weight infants;Miceli;J Pediatr Psychol,2000

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