Referral of very low birth weight infants to high-risk follow-up at neonatal intensive care unit discharge varies widely across California.

Authors: 
S.R. Hintz; J.B. Gould; M.V. Bennett; E.E. Gray; K.J. Kagawa; J. Schulman; B. Murphy; G. Villarin-Duenas; H.C. Lee
Abstract: 

OBJECTIVES: To determine rates and factors associated with referral to the California Children's Services high-risk infant follow-up (HRIF) program among very low birth weight (BW) infants in the California Perinatal Quality of Care Collaborative.

STUDY DESIGN: Using multivariable logistic regression, we examined independent associations of demographic and clinical variables, neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) volume and level, and California region with HRIF referral.

RESULTS: In 2010-2011, 8071 very low BW infants were discharged home; 6424 (80%) were referred to HRIF. Higher odds for HRIF referral were associated with lower BW (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.5-2.4; ≤ 750 g vs 1251-1499 g), higher NICU volume (OR 1.6, 1.2-2.1; highest vs lowest quartile), and California Children's Services Regional level (OR 3.1, 2.3-4.3, vs intermediate); and lower odds with small for gestational age (OR 0.79, 0.68-0.92), and maternal race African American (OR 0.58, 0.47-0.71) and Hispanic (OR 0.65, 0.55-0.76) vs white. There was wide variability in referral among regions (8%-98%) and NICUs (

Citation: 

Hintz SR, Gould JB, Bennett MV, et al. "Referral of very low birth weight infants to high-risk follow-up at neonatal intensive care unit discharge varies widely across California." J. Pediatr.. 2015;166(2):289-95.PubMed

Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2015
CPQCC publication: 
Yes
CPQCC publications category: 
Assessment of quality of care and practice patterns
PubMed ID: 
25454311