PMID: 2508848Sep 9, 1989Paper

Short term outcome in babies refused perinatal intensive care

BMJ : British Medical Journal
H SidhuW Thompson

Abstract

To compare the mortality in babies refused admission to a regional perinatal centre with that in babies accepted for intensive care in the centre. Retrospective study with group comparison. Based at the Royal Maternity Hospital, Belfast, with follow up of patients in all obstetric units in Northern Ireland. Requests for transfer of 675 babies to the regional perinatal centre (prenatally and postnatally) were made from hospitals in Northern Ireland between January 1984 and December 1986. In all, 343 babies were refused admission to the centre, and complete data were available for 332 of them. These babies were either admitted to other neonatal intensive care units (261 babies) or remained in hospitals with only special care cots (71 babies). Short term mortality. Seventy of the 332 babies refused admission to the centre died compared with 51 of the 333 who were admitted. Multivariate analysis based on a logistic model showed a non-significant increase in mortality among babies treated in other intensive care units compared with babies treated in the centre (relative odds 1.2; 95% confidence interval 0.7 to 1.9). The increase in mortality in babies who remained in a special care baby unit, however, was significant (3.5; 1.7 to 7....Continue Reading

References

Aug 18, 1979·British Medical Journal·A M BlakeE O Reynolds
Oct 18, 1986·British Medical Journal·R Cooke
Nov 29, 1986·British Medical Journal
Sep 19, 1987·British Medical Journal·T G Powell, P O Pharoah
Oct 24, 1987·British Medical Journal·M R Cohn
Jul 1, 1988·Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology·C C Patterson, H L Halliday
Apr 1, 1988·Archives of Disease in Childhood·H P RoperD G Sims
May 1, 1982·Archives of Disease in Childhood·D G SimsM L Chiswick

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Citations

Apr 1, 1991·Archives of Disease in Childhood·D FieldP Burton
Jun 1, 2001·Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology·M E Samms-VaughanA M McCaw-Binns

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