Stephanie L Bourque, Karna Murthy, Theresa R Grover, Loren Berman, Stefanie Riddle
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引用次数: 0
摘要
儿童医院新生儿联盟(CHNC)成立于 2010 年,旨在改善北美地区 IV 级地区儿童医院新生儿重症监护室对患有复杂内外科疾病的婴儿的护理。通过患者层面的个人数据收集、比较基准和多中心质量改进工作,CHNC 利用机构之间的新型合作,为知识的积累和成果的改善做出了贡献。我们以患有先天性膈疝、胃裂和坏死性小肠结肠炎等外科疾病的婴儿的产前和住院护理为重点,总结了这些婴儿的护理进展。我们重点介绍了 CHNC 通过促进特定诊断焦点小组来促成多学科和多中心合作的方式,这些焦点小组可以通过质量改进和研究计划对结果进行比较观察。最后,我们回顾了这些婴儿出生后住院需求的重要性以及远程医疗在这一人群中的应用。
Cutting into the NICU: Improvements in Outcomes for Neonates with Surgical Conditions.
The Children's Hospitals Neonatal Consortium (CHNC), established in 2010, seeks to improve care for infants with medically and surgically complex conditions who are cared for in level IV regional children's hospital NICUs across North America. Through patient-level individual data collection, comparative benchmarking, and multicenter quality improvement work, CHNC has contributed to knowledge and improved outcomes, leveraging novel collaborations between and across institutions. Focusing on antenatal and inpatient care for infants with surgical conditions including congenital diaphragmatic hernia, gastroschisis, and necrotizing enterocolitis, we summarize the progress made in these infants' care. We highlight the ways in which CHNC has enabled multidisciplinary and multicenter collaborations through the facilitation of diagnosis-specific focus groups, which enable comparative observations of outcomes through quality improvement and research initiatives. Finally, we review the importance of postbirth hospitalization needs of these infants and the application of telemedicine in this population.
NeoReviewsMedicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
110
期刊介绍:
Co-edited by Alistair G.S. Philip, MD, FAAP, and William W. Hay Jr., MD, FAAP, NeoReviews each month delivers 3 to 4 clinical reviews, case discussions, basic science insights and "on the horizon" pieces. Written and edited by experts, these concise reviews are available to NeoReviews subscribers at http://neoreviews.aappublications.org. Since January 2009, all clinical articles have been mapped to the American Board of Pediatrics (ABP) content specifications in neonatology.