Abstract
Objective
Ongoing health care challenges, low breast milk intake, and the need for rehospitalization are common during the first year of life after hospital discharge for very low birth weight (VLBW) infants. This retrospective cohort study examined breast milk intake, growth, emergency department (ED) visits, and non-surgical rehospitalizations for VLBW infants who received specialized post-discharge follow-up in western Canada, compared to VLBW infants who received standard follow-up in central Canada.
Design
Data were collected from two neonatal follow-up programs for VLBW babies (n = 150 specialized-care; n = 205 standard-care). Logistic regression was used to examine odds of breast milk intake and generalized estimating equations were used for odds of growth, ED visits and non-surgical rehospitalization by site.
Results
Specialized-care was associated with enhanced breast milk intake duration; the odds of receiving breastmilk at 4 months in the specialized-care cohort was 6 times that in the standard-care cohort. The specialized-care cohort had significantly more ED visits and rehospitalizations. However, for infants with oxygen use beyond 36 weeks compared to those with no oxygen use, the standard-care cohort had over 7 times the odds of rehospitalization where as the specialized-care cohort with no increased odds of rehospitalization.
Conclusion
Specialized neonatal nursing follow-up was associated with continued breastmilk intake beyond discharge. Infants in the specialized-care cohort used the ED and were hospitalized more often than the standard-care cohort with the exception of infants with long term oxygen needs.
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Abbreviations
- ED:
-
emergency department
- NICU:
-
neonatal intensive care unit
- VLBW:
-
very low birth weight
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K Lasby and T Sherrow collected data, drafted the initial manuscript, and reviewed and revised the manuscript.
J Jackson and Dr. Kelly contributed to study design and data collection.
T Fenton, V Stagg and D McNeil analyzed data and guided research processes.
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Lasby, K., Sherrow, T., Fenton, T. et al. Very-low-birth-weight infant short-term post-discharge outcomes: A retrospective study of specialized compared to standard care. Matern Child Health J 27, 487–496 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-022-03517-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-022-03517-z