Henry C Lee1, Richard J Powers2, Mihoko V Bennett3, Neil N Finer4, Louis P Halamek5, Courtney Nisbet3, Margaret Crockett6, Kathy Chance7, David Blackney6, Connie von Köhler8, Paul Kurtin9, Paul J Sharek10. 1. Divisions of Neonatal & Developmental Medicine and California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative, Palo Alto, California; hclee@stanford.edu. 2. Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Good Samaritan Hospital, San Jose, California; 3. Divisions of Neonatal & Developmental Medicine and California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative, Palo Alto, California; 4. Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California; 5. Divisions of Neonatal & Developmental Medicine and. 6. Sutter Medical Center, Sacramento, California; 7. California Children's Services, Sacramento, California; 8. Miller Children's Hospital Long Beach, MemorialCare Health System, Long Beach, California; 9. Rady Children's Hospital, San Diego, California; and. 10. California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative, Palo Alto, California; General Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California; Center for Quality and Clinical Effectiveness, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Palo Alto, California.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is little evidence to compare the effectiveness of large collaborative quality improvement versus individual local projects. METHODS: This was a prospective pre-post intervention study of neonatal resuscitation practice, comparing 3 groups of nonrandomized hospitals in the California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative: (1) collaborative, hospitals working together through face-to-face meetings, webcasts, electronic mailing list, and data sharing; (2) individual, hospitals working independently; and (3) nonparticipant hospitals. The collaborative and individual arms participated in improvement activities, focusing on reducing hypothermia and invasive ventilatory support. RESULTS: There were 20 collaborative, 31 individual, and 44 nonparticipant hospitals caring for 12,528 eligible infants. Each group had reduced hypothermia from baseline to postintervention. The collaborative group had the most significant decrease in hypothermia, from 39% to 21%, compared with individual hospital efforts of 38% to 33%, and nonparticipants of 42% to 34%. After risk adjustment, the collaborative group had twice the magnitude of decrease in rates of newborns with hypothermia compared with the other groups. Collaborative improvement also led to greater decreases in delivery room intubation (53% to 40%) and surfactant administration (37% to 20%). CONCLUSIONS: Collaborative efforts resulted in larger improvements in delivery room outcomes and processes than individual efforts or nonparticipation. These findings have implications for planning quality improvement projects for implementation of evidence-based practices.
BACKGROUND: There is little evidence to compare the effectiveness of large collaborative quality improvement versus individual local projects. METHODS: This was a prospective pre-post intervention study of neonatal resuscitation practice, comparing 3 groups of nonrandomized hospitals in the California Perinatal Quality Care Collaborative: (1) collaborative, hospitals working together through face-to-face meetings, webcasts, electronic mailing list, and data sharing; (2) individual, hospitals working independently; and (3) nonparticipant hospitals. The collaborative and individual arms participated in improvement activities, focusing on reducing hypothermia and invasive ventilatory support. RESULTS: There were 20 collaborative, 31 individual, and 44 nonparticipant hospitals caring for 12,528 eligible infants. Each group had reduced hypothermia from baseline to postintervention. The collaborative group had the most significant decrease in hypothermia, from 39% to 21%, compared with individual hospital efforts of 38% to 33%, and nonparticipants of 42% to 34%. After risk adjustment, the collaborative group had twice the magnitude of decrease in rates of newborns with hypothermia compared with the other groups. Collaborative improvement also led to greater decreases in delivery room intubation (53% to 40%) and surfactant administration (37% to 20%). CONCLUSIONS: Collaborative efforts resulted in larger improvements in delivery room outcomes and processes than individual efforts or nonparticipation. These findings have implications for planning quality improvement projects for implementation of evidence-based practices.
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