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Title: Back transfer: capability of community hospitals to serve chronically ill and convalescing infants. Author: Farel A, Kotelchuck M, Metzguer K, Fullar S. Journal: J Perinatol; 1993; 13(2):132-6. PubMed ID: 8515306. Abstract: Severe crowding in neonatal intensive care facilities may prevent many critically ill newborn infants from receiving optimal care. Crowding could be alleviated by back transferring chronically ill or convalescing infants to intermediate-level community hospitals where community-based care can be delivered. The purpose of this study was to assess the ability of such hospitals in North Carolina to care for these children. A telephone survey was administered to all 35 intermediate-level community hospitals that had > or = 600 births per year. Hospital resources were assessed on the first call, and a 1-day census was taken for three successive months. Total daily nursery census was 288. Back-transferred infants (32) and infants whose stay exceeded 5 days (32) constituted 24% of the nursery population. Each hospital had a pediatric medical director and necessary equipment to care for back transfers, and 80% of the hospitals could accept a back-transferred infant who was in a neonatal incubator, tube fed, receiving oxygen, 1400 gm, with mild and infrequent apnea and bradycardia--a common clinical picture in such infants. The most severe limitation to accepting infants for back transfer was the shortage of nursing staff appropriately trained to care for this population. These data have implications for effective discharge planning and the development of appropriate community-based, service-delivery systems.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]