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Modelling neonatal care pathways: costs and consequences for the future

Safe People

Organisation name

University of Leicester

Organisation sector

Academic Institute

Applicant name(s)

Sarah Seaton

Funders/ Sponsors

NIHR

Safe Projects

Project ID

nnrd48

Lay summary

Modelling length of stay in neonatal care is vital to inform service planning and the counselling of parents. Preterm babies, at the highest risk of mortality, can have long stays in neonatal care and require high resource use. Previous work has incorporated babies that die into length of stay estimates, but this still overlooks the levels of care required during their stay. This work incorporates all babies, and the levels of care they require, into length of stay estimates. Data were obtained from the National Neonatal Research Database for singleton babies born at 24–31 weeks gestational age discharged from a neonatal unit in England from 2011 to 2014. A Cox multistate model, adjusted for gestational age, was used to consider a baby’s two competing outcomes: death or discharge from neonatal care, whilst also considering the different levels of care required: intensive care; high dependency care and special care. The probabilities of receiving each of the levels of care, or having died or been discharged from neonatal care are presented graphically overall and adjusted for gestational age. Stacked predicted probabilities produced for each week of gestational age provide a useful tool for clinicians when counselling parents about length of stay and for commissioners when considering allocation of resources. Multistate modelling provides a useful method for describing the entire neonatal care pathway, where rates of in-unit mortality can be high. For a healthcare service focussed on costs, it is important to consider all babies that contribute towards workload, and the levels of care they require.

Public benefit statement

This study will investigate the neonatal care pathways taken by newborn babies who require neonatal care after birth. It will allow estimation of the length of stay potentially expected at each level of care, which will help inform clinicians about future resource use and improve counselling of families.

Other approval committees

REC reference: 14/NW/0349

Safe Data

Data sensitivity level

Anonymous

Safe Setting

Access type

Release