4.3 Article

Neonatal Resuscitation Practices in Europe: A Survey of the Union of European Neonatal and Perinatal Societies

Journal

NEONATOLOGY
Volume 119, Issue 2, Pages 184-192

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000520617

Keywords

Survey; Europe; Neonatal resuscitation

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This study evaluated the policies and practices of neonatal resuscitation in European hospitals and found significant differences between hospitals in terms of antenatal counseling, the presence of a resuscitation team, umbilical cord management, thermal management, and heart rate monitoring. Variance in practice, ethical decision-making, and training programs were also found between hospitals in different European areas.
Background: We aimed to evaluate the policies and practices about neonatal resuscitation in a large sample of European hospitals. Methods: This was a cross-sectional electronic survey. A 91-item questionnaire focusing on the current delivery room practices in neonatal resuscitation domains was individually sent to the directors of 730 European neonatal facilities or (in 5 countries) made available as a Web-based link. A comparison was made between hospitals with <= 2,000 and those with >2,000 births/year and between hospitals in 5 European areas (Eastern Europe, Italy, Mediterranean countries, Turkey, and Western Europe). Results: The response rate was 57% and included participants from 33 European countries. In 2018, approximately 1.27 million births occurred at the participating hospitals, with a median of 1,900 births/center (interquartile range: 1,400-3,000). Routine antenatal counseling (p < 0.05), the presence of a resuscitation team at all deliveries (p < 0.01), umbilical cord management (p < 0.01), practices for thermal management (p < 0.05), and heart rate monitoring (p < 0.01) were significantly different between hospitals with <= 2,000 births/year and those with >2,000 births/year. Ethical and educational aspects were similar between hospitals with low and high birth volumes. Significant variance in practice, ethical decision-making, and training programs were found between hospitals in 5 different European areas. Conclusions: Several recommendations about available equipment and clinical practices recommended by the international guidelines are already implemented by centers in Europe, but a large variance still persists. Clinicians and stakeholders should consider this information when allocating resources and planning European perinatal programs.

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