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NICU Admissions After a Policy to Eliminate Elective Early Term Deliveries Before 39 Weeks’ Gestation
Author(s) -
Erin B. Kennedy,
Michele R. Hacker,
David Miedema,
DeWayne M. Pursley,
Anna M. Modest,
Toni Golen,
Heather H. Burris
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
hospital pediatrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 2154-1663
pISSN - 2154-1671
DOI - 10.1542/hpeds.2018-0068
Subject(s) - medicine , incidence (geometry) , gestation , pediatrics , neonatal intensive care unit , confidence interval , poisson regression , retrospective cohort study , singleton , hypoglycemia , obstetrics , gestational age , cohort study , pregnancy , population , surgery , diabetes mellitus , physics , environmental health , biology , optics , genetics , endocrinology
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Early term infants (37–<39 weeks’ gestation) are at higher risk of adverse outcomes than term infants (39–<41 weeks’ gestation). We hypothesized that a policy to eliminate elective, early term deliveries would result in fewer NICU admissions and shorter lengths of stay among infants born ≥37 weeks. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study of singleton infants born ≥37 weeks at a tertiary medical center from 2004 to 2015 (preperiod: 2004–2008; postperiod: 2010–2015; washout period: 2009). We compared the incidence of early term delivery, NICU admissions (short: ≥4–<24 hours, long: ≥24 hours), NICU diagnoses, and stillbirths in both periods. We used modified Poisson regression to calculate adjusted risk ratios. RESULTS: There were 20 708 and 24 897 singleton infants born ≥37 weeks in the pre- and postperiod, respectively. The proportion of early term infants decreased from 32.5% to 25.7% (P < .0001). NICU admissions decreased nonsignificantly (9.2% to 8.8%; P = .22), with a significant reduction in short NICU stays (5.4% to 4.6%; adjusted risk ratio: 0.85 [95% confidence interval: 0.79–0.93]). Long NICU stays increased slightly (3.8% to 4.2%), a result that was nullified by adjusting for neonatal hypoglycemia. A nonsignificant increase in the incidence of stillbirths ≥37 to <40 weeks was present in the postperiod (7.5 to 10 per 10 000 births; P = .46). CONCLUSIONS: Reducing early term deliveries was associated with fewer short NICU stays, suggesting that efforts to discourage early term deliveries in uncomplicated pregnancies may minimize mother-infant separation in the newborn period.

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