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The impact of a regional care bundle on maternal breast milk use in preterm infants: outcomes of the East of England quality improvement programme.

The impact of a regional care bundle on maternal breast milk use in preterm infants: outcomes of the East of England quality improvement programme.
The impact of a regional care bundle on maternal breast milk use in preterm infants: outcomes of the East of England quality improvement programme.
Objective: to evaluate a quality improvement (QI) programme to increase the use of maternal breast milk (MBM) in preterm infants.

Design: interrupted time series analysis.

Setting: 17 neonatal units in the East of England (EoE) Perinatal Network; 144 in the rest of the UK Neonatal Collaborative (UKNC).

Patients: infants born ≤32+6 weeks gestation admitted to neonatal care between 2009 and 2012.

Intervention: a ‘care bundle’ to promote MBM in the EoE.

Outcomes: percentage of infants receiving exclusive or any MBM at discharge and care days where any MBM was received.

Methods: data were extracted from the National Neonatal Research Database; outcomes were compared preintervention and postintervention, and in relation to the rest of the UKNC.

Results: exclusive and any MBM use at discharge increased from 26% to 33% and 50% to 57% respectively in the EoE, though there was no evidence of a step or trend change following the introduction of the care bundle. Exclusive MBM use at discharge improved significantly faster in EoE than the rest of the UKNC; 0.22% (95% CI 0.11 to 0.34) increase per month versus 0.05% (95% CI 0.01 to 0.09, p=0.007 for difference). The percentage of infants receiving MBM at discharge and care days where any MBM was received was not significantly different between EoE and the rest of the UKNC.

Conclusions: this QI programme was associated with some improvement in MBM use in preterm infants that would not have been evident without the use of routinely recorded national comparator data.
1359-2998
F395-F401
Battersby, C.
24ba455f-7f54-427c-8732-3007926ee5ce
Santhakumaran, S.
13e63d8c-1c31-41f2-9841-d046c301528c
Upton, M.
bc3b4fdf-740f-4def-974c-895c9bc65584
Radbone, L.
3c303692-8187-4b9c-a3ce-9282a1276cf9
Birch, J.
e9cb2521-5af8-47b0-bf55-ac33b6dabc08
Modi, N.
2e50ed32-b821-480f-b4af-b8669ce77e52
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
the East of England Perinatal Networks
the UK Neonatal Collaborative
the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit
Battersby, C.
24ba455f-7f54-427c-8732-3007926ee5ce
Santhakumaran, S.
13e63d8c-1c31-41f2-9841-d046c301528c
Upton, M.
bc3b4fdf-740f-4def-974c-895c9bc65584
Radbone, L.
3c303692-8187-4b9c-a3ce-9282a1276cf9
Birch, J.
e9cb2521-5af8-47b0-bf55-ac33b6dabc08
Modi, N.
2e50ed32-b821-480f-b4af-b8669ce77e52
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630

Battersby, C., Santhakumaran, S., Upton, M., Radbone, L., Birch, J. and Modi, N. , the East of England Perinatal Networks, the UK Neonatal Collaborative and the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit (2014) The impact of a regional care bundle on maternal breast milk use in preterm infants: outcomes of the East of England quality improvement programme. Archives of Disease in Childhood. Fetal and Neonatal Edition, 99, F395-F401. (doi:10.1136/archdischild-2013-305475).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to evaluate a quality improvement (QI) programme to increase the use of maternal breast milk (MBM) in preterm infants.

Design: interrupted time series analysis.

Setting: 17 neonatal units in the East of England (EoE) Perinatal Network; 144 in the rest of the UK Neonatal Collaborative (UKNC).

Patients: infants born ≤32+6 weeks gestation admitted to neonatal care between 2009 and 2012.

Intervention: a ‘care bundle’ to promote MBM in the EoE.

Outcomes: percentage of infants receiving exclusive or any MBM at discharge and care days where any MBM was received.

Methods: data were extracted from the National Neonatal Research Database; outcomes were compared preintervention and postintervention, and in relation to the rest of the UKNC.

Results: exclusive and any MBM use at discharge increased from 26% to 33% and 50% to 57% respectively in the EoE, though there was no evidence of a step or trend change following the introduction of the care bundle. Exclusive MBM use at discharge improved significantly faster in EoE than the rest of the UKNC; 0.22% (95% CI 0.11 to 0.34) increase per month versus 0.05% (95% CI 0.01 to 0.09, p=0.007 for difference). The percentage of infants receiving MBM at discharge and care days where any MBM was received was not significantly different between EoE and the rest of the UKNC.

Conclusions: this QI programme was associated with some improvement in MBM use in preterm infants that would not have been evident without the use of routinely recorded national comparator data.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 May 2014

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492939
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492939
ISSN: 1359-2998
PURE UUID: 25385117-43a3-493e-a739-810ce95b1016
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 21 Aug 2024 16:32
Last modified: 22 Aug 2024 02:10

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Contributors

Author: C. Battersby
Author: S. Santhakumaran
Author: M. Upton
Author: L. Radbone
Author: J. Birch
Author: N. Modi
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Corporate Author: the East of England Perinatal Networks
Corporate Author: the UK Neonatal Collaborative
Corporate Author: the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit

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