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      Improvement in neonatal intensive care in Northern Ireland through sharing of audit data.

      Quality & Safety in Health Care
      Body Temperature Regulation, Data Collection, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Information Dissemination, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, standards, Interinstitutional Relations, Medical Audit, Northern Ireland, Patient Transfer, Quality Assurance, Health Care, trends, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Steroids, administration & dosage, Surface-Active Agents

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          Abstract

          Ten percent of infants born will require admission to a neonatal facility. Coordinated activity to monitor and improve the quality of care for this high risk, high cost group of infants is considered a high priority. At the time of initiation of this project no system for collection and analysis of neonatal data existed in Northern Ireland. In 1994 an ongoing prospective centralised data collection system was implemented to facilitate quality improvement and research in neonatal care. We aim to ascertain if there has been a demonstrable improvement in the quality of care provided since the initiation of this system. All nine Northern Ireland neonatal intensive care units returned prospectively collected socioeconomic, obstetric and neonatal episode data. Achievement of the agreed quality indicators relating to transfer patterns, thermoregulation, antenatal steroid administration, and timing of administration of surfactant during the period 1 April 1999 to 31 March 2000 were compared with data for the period 1 April 1994 to 31 March 1996. Monitoring included audit and annual feedback of timely clear and relevant data where results were provided confidentially as standardised reports, together with anonymised comparisons with other similar sized units. Draft recommendations were made at regional level and units were asked to adopt finalized consensus guidelines at the local level and to implement changes to clinical practice. The proportion of transfers taking place in utero increased from 26% to 42% and antenatal steroid administration from 68% to 82%. Normothermia on first admission improved from 66% to 71% for inborn infants. The proportion of infants receiving surfactant where the first dose was given within an hour of birth increased from 13% to 66%. A multi-professional regional care network can facilitate the development of agreed standards and a culture of regular evaluation leading to quality improvement.

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