Lauren Heimall, Michele Barrila-Yetman, Kia R McCray, Danielle Cestare, Melissa Duran, K Taylor Wild, Anne Ades
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Preventing Hypothermia in Newborns With Congenital Anomalies in the Delivery Room.
Background: Thermoregulation interventions in the delivery room have historically focused on preterm infants and studies often exclude term infants or those infants with known congenital anomalies.
Purpose: The purpose of this quality improvement project was to reduce the rate of admission hypothermia in neonates of all gestational ages born with congenital anomalies and admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).
Methods: Utilizing the Institute for Healthcare Improvement model for improvement, implementation of plan, do study, act cycles focused on standardizing temperatures of the delivery room and resuscitation bed, recommendations for temperature monitoring, trialing polyethylene lined hats, and implementing a delivery room thermoregulation checklist.
Results: Overall, the mean rate of neonates admitted to the ICU hypothermic (<36.5°C) decreased from 27% to 9% over an 8-month period.
Implications for practice and research: The interventions significantly reduced the number of neonates admitted to the ICU with hypothermia. Implementation of thermoregulation bundles should apply to all neonates with congenital anomalies to decrease risks associated with hypothermia.
期刊介绍:
Advances in Neonatal Care takes a unique and dynamic approach to the original research and clinical practice articles it publishes. Addressing the practice challenges faced every day—caring for the 40,000-plus low-birth-weight infants in Level II and Level III NICUs each year—the journal promotes evidence-based care and improved outcomes for the tiniest patients and their families. Peer-reviewed editorial includes unique and detailed visual and teaching aids, such as Family Teaching Toolbox, Research to Practice, Cultivating Clinical Expertise, and Online Features.
Each issue offers Continuing Education (CE) articles in both print and online formats.