Estimating the quality of neonatal transport in California.

Authors: 
J.B. Gould; B.H. Danielsen; L. Bollman; A. Hackel; B. Murphy
Abstract: 

OBJECTIVE: To develop a strategy to assess the quality of neonatal transport based on change in neonatal condition during transport.

STUDY DESIGN: The Canadian Transport Risk Index of Physiologic Stability (TRIPS) score was optimized for a California (Ca) population using data collected on 21 279 acute neonatal transports, 2007 to 2009, using models predicting (2/3) and validating (1/3) mortality within 7 days of transport. Quality Change Point 10th percentile (QCP10), a benchmark of the greatest deterioration seen in 10% of the transports by top-performing teams, was established.

RESULT: Compared with perinatal variables (0.79), the Ca-TRIPS had a validation receiver operator characteristic area for prediction of death of 0.88 in all infants and 0.86 in infants transported after day 7. The risk of death increased 2.4-fold in infants whose deterioration exceeded the QCP10.

CONCLUSION: We present a practical, benchmarked, risk-adjusted, estimate of the quality of neonatal transport.

Citation: 

Gould JB, Danielsen BH, Bollman L, Hackel A, Murphy B. "Estimating the quality of neonatal transport in California." J Perinatol. 2013;33(12):964-70.PubMed

Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2013
CPQCC publication: 
Yes
CPQCC publications category: 
Assessment of quality of care and practice patterns
PubMed ID: 
24071907