• Wide variations in car seat breathing as

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Mon Aug 24 21:30:32 2020
    Wide variations in car seat breathing assessment conducted on premature newborns

    Date:
    August 24, 2020
    Source:
    University of Maryland Medical Center
    Summary:
    A new study has found wide variations throughout the United States
    in the way hospitals ensure that premature or low birth weight
    infants can breathe safely in a car seat before discharging
    them. The same infant who passes a screening in one hospital's
    newborn nursery may fail in similar facilities at another hospital's
    nursery.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A new study from the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) has found wide variations throughout the United States in the way hospitals
    ensure that premature or low birth weight infants can breathe safely in a
    car seat before discharging them. The study, published this month in the journal Pediatrics, found that the same infant who passes a screening in
    one hospital's newborn nursery (NBN) may fail in similar facilities at
    another hospital's nursery. The authors concluded that "further guidance
    on screening practices and failure criteria is needed to inform future
    practice and policy" in order to better protect these vulnerable newborns.


    ========================================================================== "Proper placement of an infant in their car seat can be a challenge,
    but it's important to get it right. Research has shown that 63 percent
    of infant sleep- related deaths that occur in sitting devices are in
    car seats," said the study lead author, Natalie L. Davis, MD, MMSc,
    Associate Professor of Pediatrics at UMSOM and a Neonatologist at the University of Maryland Children's Hospital.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends a car seat tolerance
    screen (CSTS) for all premature newborns in the U.S. in order to identify
    any heart or breathing risks that could make use of a car seat unsafe
    in these babies whose lungs are not fully developed.

    "The infants are placed in a car seat with a breathing and heart rate
    monitor for an hour-and-a-half to two hours to see if they are breathing effectively," Dr. Davis said. "The problem is that the AAP recommendations
    do not have specific guidelines on what to test for and how to test,
    and do not provide much guidance on what doctors should do if infants
    fail these tests," said Dr.

    Davis.

    Hospitalized newborns are placed flat on their backs as part of national
    "Back- to-Sleep" measures to prevent sudden infant death syndrome
    (SIDS). "In the hospital, we use monitors on at-risk premature babies,
    and we do not send them home until they have established normal vital
    signs in their crib," said Dr.

    Davis. When at-risk infants are placed in a car seat for the ride home
    from the hospital, however, the semi-upright sitting position can pose breathing obstacles that may not be obvious in the flat-back position.

    To gain a snapshot of CSTS practices today, the researchers conducted
    a survey across 35 states using a network of hospitals that participate
    in an outcomes research network. Of the 84 newborn nurseries surveyed,
    90.5 percent reported performing a pre-discharge CSTS. Dr. Davis and
    her colleagues found, however, that newborn nurseries varied in how
    they selected newborns to be screened and what parameters they used
    to identify failure on a test. They also had inconsistent practices in
    how they dealt with a screening failure in terms of recommendations for
    parents to use special infant car beds instead of car seats and in making referrals to specialists for follow-up monitoring.



    ==========================================================================
    Most NBNs surveyed said they did repeat a CSTS after an initial failure,
    but the timing ranged from an immediate retest, to a minimum seven-day observation before retesting.

    In a previous study published earlier this year in the journal
    Academic Pediatrics, Dr. Davis and her colleagues also found similar inconsistencies in the use of CSTS among infants discharged from neonatal intensive care units in hospitals throughout the country.

    Dr. Davis said the findings from both studies highlight the need for
    more specific recommendations from the AAP to define failure criteria on
    these tests and recommended steps for follow-up if an infant fails. While
    she acknowledged that limited data have made it difficult for the AAP
    to establish evidence- based guidelines, having nationally consistent recommendations could help improve the collection of data and lead to refinement of the advice if needed.

    "If we are all doing something similar," she said, "then we can
    consistently see if we are actually catching the babies who are at risk
    and take the appropriate steps we need to modify from there." Two areas
    that can be improved immediately:
    * 1. Parents and caregivers can be better educated on the proper
    placement
    and fit of an infant in the car seat through the use of child
    passenger safety technicians at the hospital.

    2. Newborn nurseries should arrange for appropriate post-discharge
    follow-up, particularly if an infant is sent home in a car
    bed. Parents will need to know when it is safe to transition their
    baby to an upright infant car seat.

    "This research clearly establishes a need for national standards to
    ensure that hospitals are providing consistent care to neonates," said
    E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, a specialist in maternal-fetal medicine,
    who is Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs, UM Baltimore,
    and the John Z. and Akiko K.

    Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean, University of Maryland School
    of Medicine. "It also points to the need for better data to help inform
    our medical societies when they make these public health recommendations."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    University_of_Maryland_Medical_Center. Note: Content may be edited for
    style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal References:
    1. Natalie L. Davis, Benjamin D. Hoffman, Eric C. Eichenwald. Variation
    in
    Car Seat Tolerance Screen Performance in Newborn
    Nurseries. Pediatrics, 2020; 146 (2): e20193593 DOI:
    10.1542/peds.2019-3593
    2. Natalie L. Davis, Savannah Cheo. A National Survey of Car Seat
    Tolerance
    Screening Protocols in Neonatal Intensive Care Units. Academic
    Pediatrics, 2020; DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2020.02.004 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200824105542.htm

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