BibTex format
@article{Gale:2012:10.1136/bmj.e2105,
author = {Gale, C and Santhakumaran, S and Nagarajan, S and Statnikov, Y and Modi, N},
doi = {10.1136/bmj.e2105},
journal = {British Medical Journal},
title = {Impact of managed clinical networks on NHS specialist neonatal services in England: population based study},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e2105},
volume = {344},
year = {2012}
}
RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)
TY - JOUR
AB - Objective To assess the impact of reorganisation of neonatal specialist care services in England after a UK Department of Health report in 2003.Design A population-wide observational comparison of outcomes over two epochs, before and after the establishment of managed clinical neonatal networks.Setting Epoch one: 294 maternity and neonatal units in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, 1 September 1998 to 31 August 2000, as reported by the Confidential Enquiry into Stillbirths and Sudden Deaths in Infancy Project 27/28. Epoch two: 146 neonatal units in England contributing data to the National Neonatal Research Database at the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit, 1 January 2009 to 31 December 2010.Participants Babies born at a gestational age of 27+0-28+6 (weeks+days): 3522 live births in epoch one; 2919 babies admitted to a neonatal unit within 28 days of birth in epoch two.Intervention The national reorganisation of neonatal services into managed clinical networks.Main outcome measures The proportion of babies born at hospitals providing the highest volume of neonatal specialist care (≥2000 neonatal intensive care days annually), having an acute transfer (within the first 24 hours after birth) and/or a late transfer (between 24 hours and 28 days after birth) to another hospital, assessed by change in distribution of transfer category (“none,” “acute,” “late”), and babies from multiple births separated by transfer. For acute transfers in epoch two, the level of specialist neonatal care provided at the destination hospital (British Association of Perinatal Medicine criteria).Results After reorganisation, there were increases in the proportions of babies born at 27-28 weeks’ gestation in hospitals providing the highest volume of neonatal specialist care (18% (631/3495) v 49% (1325/2724); odds ratio 4.30, 95% confidence interval 3.83 to 4.82; P<0.001) and in acute and late postnatal transfers (7% (235) v 12% (360) and 18% (579)
AU - Gale,C
AU - Santhakumaran,S
AU - Nagarajan,S
AU - Statnikov,Y
AU - Modi,N
DO - 10.1136/bmj.e2105
PY - 2012///
SN - 1468-5833
TI - Impact of managed clinical networks on NHS specialist neonatal services in England: population based study
T2 - British Medical Journal
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e2105
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/22122
VL - 344
ER -