학술논문

Characteristics of children requiring admission to neonatal care and paediatric intensive care before the age of 2 years in England and Wales: a data linkage study
Document Type
Article
Source
Archives of Disease in Childhood; 2024, Vol. 109 Issue: 5 p387-394, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00039888; 14682044
Abstract
ObjectiveTo quantify the characteristics of children admitted to neonatal units (NNUs) and paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) before the age of 2 years.DesignA data linkage study of routinely collected data.SettingNational Health Service NNUs and PICUs in England and WalesPatientsChildren born from 2013 to 2018.InterventionsNone.Main outcome measureAdmission to PICU before the age of 2 years.ResultsA total of 384 747 babies were admitted to an NNU and 4.8% (n=18 343) were also admitted to PICU before the age of 2 years. Approximately half of all children admitted to PICU under the age of 2 years born in the same time window (n=18 343/37 549) had previously been cared for in an NNU.The main reasons for first admission to PICU were cardiac (n=7138) and respiratory conditions (n=5386). Cardiac admissions were primarily from children born at term (n=5146), while respiratory admissions were primarily from children born preterm (<37 weeks’ gestational age, n=3550). A third of children admitted to PICU had more than one admission.ConclusionsHealthcare professionals caring for babies and children in NNU and PICU see some of the same children in the first 2 years of life. While some children are following established care pathways (eg, staged cardiac surgery), the small proportion of children needing NNU care subsequently requiring PICU care account for a large proportion of the total PICU population. These differences may affect perceptions of risk for this group of children between NNU and PICU teams.