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Prehospital birth: inequalities and neonatal hypothermia in the south west of England.

Goodwin, Laura, Osborne, Ria, McClelland, Graham, Beach, Emily, Bedson, Adam, Deave, Toity, Kirby, Kim, McAdam, Helen, McKeon-Carter, Roisin, Miller, Nick, Taylor, Hazel, Voss, Sarah and Benger, Jonathan (2023) Prehospital birth: inequalities and neonatal hypothermia in the south west of England. Emergency Medical Journal, 40. A2-A2. ISSN 1472-0205

Item Type: Article

Abstract

Background: Neonatal hypothermia(<36.5C) is an important risk factor for babies born before arrival at hospital (BBA). In the prehospital setting babies can become hypothermic within minutes. Paramedic temperature measurement of BBA babies is inconsistent in the UK, with temperatures recorded in only 310% of cases. We aimed to examine which groups of women are most likely to experience BBA babies are hypothermic on arrival at hospital in the south west of England.
Methods: Anonymised extracts from routinely collected data (hospital neonatal records) were provided by six South West NHS Hospital trusts from a three year period (January 2018-January 2021). Records were included if they related to a live birth (24 weeks) attended by paramedics. Demographic characteristics of the mothers (e.g. age, ethnicity, safeguarding status) and characteristics of the birth (e.g. gestation, temperature on admission and treatment) were analysed and presented using descriptive statistics.
Results: 216 babies were conveyed to hospital by the ambulance service during this time period. There were 32 records (15%) with no admission temperature documented. Of those with a recorded admission temperature, 35% (64/184) were hypothermic on arrival at hospital. Neonatal hypothermia on arrival at hospital was associated with the need for advanced hospital care and extended length of stay. Characteristics associated with BBA included safeguarding concerns and late booking. Mothers of hypothermic babies were less likely to have had a previous birth, and more likely to have reported a disability at their booking appointment.
Conclusion: More should be done to support prehospital temperature management of BBA babies to prevent neonatal hypothermia. Although these findings may help hospital trusts to identify who maybe at increased chance of BBA in the South West, the study is limited by the small sample size. Further work would be needed to confirm these associations.

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More Information

Depositing User: Helen McAdam

Identifiers

Item ID: 18928
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2023-999.3
ISSN: 1472-0205
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/18928
Official URL: https://emj.bmj.com/content/40/Suppl_1/A2.1

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Catalogue record

Date Deposited: 08 Apr 2025 08:33
Last Modified: 08 Apr 2025 08:45

Contributors

Author: Laura Goodwin
Author: Ria Osborne
Author: Graham McClelland
Author: Emily Beach
Author: Adam Bedson
Author: Toity Deave
Author: Kim Kirby
Author: Helen McAdam
Author: Roisin McKeon-Carter
Author: Nick Miller
Author: Hazel Taylor
Author: Sarah Voss
Author: Jonathan Benger

University Divisions

Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing > School of Nursing and Health Sciences

Subjects

Sciences > Health Sciences

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