A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants

Background: There is a lack of clarity of what constitutes the starting point of a clinical pathway for infants at-risk of hypoglycaemia. Glucose-centric pathways (GCP) identify low glucose in the first 2 hours of life that may not represent clinical hypoglycaemia and can lead to inappropriate gluco...

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Main Authors: Chandran, Suresh, Siew, Jia Xuan, Rajadurai, Victor Samuel, Lim, Rachel Wei Shan, Chua, Mei Chien, Yap, Fabian
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164327
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1643272023-03-05T16:53:03Z A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants Chandran, Suresh Siew, Jia Xuan Rajadurai, Victor Samuel Lim, Rachel Wei Shan Chua, Mei Chien Yap, Fabian Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) KK Women's and Children's Hospital Duke NUS Medical School Science::Medicine Breast Feeding Capillary Blood Background: There is a lack of clarity of what constitutes the starting point of a clinical pathway for infants at-risk of hypoglycaemia. Glucose-centric pathways (GCP) identify low glucose in the first 2 hours of life that may not represent clinical hypoglycaemia and can lead to inappropriate glucose management with infusions and medications. Objective: To study the impact of a feed-centric pathway (FCP) on the number of admissions for hypoglycaemia to level 2 special care nursery (SCN) and the need for parenteral glucose/medications, compared to GCP. Methods: This project was conducted over 2 years, before and after switching from a GCP to FCP in our institution. FCP involves skin-to-skin care, early breast feeding, checking glucose at 2 hours and use of buccal glucose. The primary outcome was the number of SCN admissions for hypoglycaemia. Secondary outcomes include the number of infants needing intravenous glucose, medications and length of SCN stay. Results: Of 23 786 live births, 4438 newborns were screened. We screened more infants at-risk for hypoglycaemia using the FCP (GCP:1462/11969, 12.2% vs FCP:2976/11817, 25.1%) but significantly reduced SCN admissions (GCP:246/1462, 16.8% vs FCP:102/2976, 3.4%; p<0.0001). Fewer but proportionally more FCP newborns required intravenous glucose (GCP: 136/246, 55% vs FCP: 88/102, 86%; p=0.000). Compared with GCP, FCP reduced the total duration of stay in SCN by 104 days per annum, reducing the cost of care. However, the mean length of SCN stay for FCP was higher (GCP:2.43 days vs FCP:3.49 days; p=0.001). There were no readmissions for neonatal hypoglycaemia to our institution. Conclusion: The use of FCP safely reduced SCN admissions, averted avoidable escalation of care and helped identify infants who genuinely required intravenous glucose and SCN care, allowing more efficient utilisation of healthcare resources. Published version 2023-01-16T06:12:14Z 2023-01-16T06:12:14Z 2021 Journal Article Chandran, S., Siew, J. X., Rajadurai, V. S., Lim, R. W. S., Chua, M. C. & Yap, F. (2021). A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants. BMJ Open Quality, 10(4), e001296-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2020-001296 2399-6641 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164327 10.1136/bmjoq-2020-001296 34921009 2-s2.0-85122217229 4 10 e001296 en BMJ Open Quality © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Medicine
Breast Feeding
Capillary Blood
spellingShingle Science::Medicine
Breast Feeding
Capillary Blood
Chandran, Suresh
Siew, Jia Xuan
Rajadurai, Victor Samuel
Lim, Rachel Wei Shan
Chua, Mei Chien
Yap, Fabian
A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
description Background: There is a lack of clarity of what constitutes the starting point of a clinical pathway for infants at-risk of hypoglycaemia. Glucose-centric pathways (GCP) identify low glucose in the first 2 hours of life that may not represent clinical hypoglycaemia and can lead to inappropriate glucose management with infusions and medications. Objective: To study the impact of a feed-centric pathway (FCP) on the number of admissions for hypoglycaemia to level 2 special care nursery (SCN) and the need for parenteral glucose/medications, compared to GCP. Methods: This project was conducted over 2 years, before and after switching from a GCP to FCP in our institution. FCP involves skin-to-skin care, early breast feeding, checking glucose at 2 hours and use of buccal glucose. The primary outcome was the number of SCN admissions for hypoglycaemia. Secondary outcomes include the number of infants needing intravenous glucose, medications and length of SCN stay. Results: Of 23 786 live births, 4438 newborns were screened. We screened more infants at-risk for hypoglycaemia using the FCP (GCP:1462/11969, 12.2% vs FCP:2976/11817, 25.1%) but significantly reduced SCN admissions (GCP:246/1462, 16.8% vs FCP:102/2976, 3.4%; p<0.0001). Fewer but proportionally more FCP newborns required intravenous glucose (GCP: 136/246, 55% vs FCP: 88/102, 86%; p=0.000). Compared with GCP, FCP reduced the total duration of stay in SCN by 104 days per annum, reducing the cost of care. However, the mean length of SCN stay for FCP was higher (GCP:2.43 days vs FCP:3.49 days; p=0.001). There were no readmissions for neonatal hypoglycaemia to our institution. Conclusion: The use of FCP safely reduced SCN admissions, averted avoidable escalation of care and helped identify infants who genuinely required intravenous glucose and SCN care, allowing more efficient utilisation of healthcare resources.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Chandran, Suresh
Siew, Jia Xuan
Rajadurai, Victor Samuel
Lim, Rachel Wei Shan
Chua, Mei Chien
Yap, Fabian
format Article
author Chandran, Suresh
Siew, Jia Xuan
Rajadurai, Victor Samuel
Lim, Rachel Wei Shan
Chua, Mei Chien
Yap, Fabian
author_sort Chandran, Suresh
title A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
title_short A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
title_full A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
title_fullStr A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
title_full_unstemmed A feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
title_sort feed-centric hypoglycaemia pathway ensures appropriate care escalation in at-risk infants
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164327
_version_ 1759857734897893376