1. Newborn screening timeliness quality improvement initiative: Impact of national recommendations and data repository
- Author
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Yvonne Kellar-Guenther, Marci K. Sontag, Sikha Singh, Sari Edelman, Joseph A. Bocchini, Joshua I. Miller, Careema Yusuf, Deboshree Sarkar, Jelili Ojodu, Ruthanne Sheller, Sarah McKasson, and Joan Scott
- Subjects
Health Screening ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Research Facilities ,Quality management ,Physiology ,Health Care Providers ,Maternal Health ,Science ,Advisory committee ,Advisory Committees ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Timely diagnosis ,Labor and Delivery ,Neonatal Screening ,Interquartile range ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Humans ,Medicine ,Public and Occupational Health ,Child ,Newborn screening ,Health Care Policy ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Time to result ,Recem nascido ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Neonates ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Quality Improvement ,Body Fluids ,Health Care ,Blood ,Specimen collection ,Emergency medicine ,Birth ,Women's Health ,Anatomy ,Laboratories ,Research Laboratories ,business ,Screening Guidelines ,Research Article ,Government Laboratories ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
BackgroundNewborn screening (NBS) aims to achieve early identification and treatment of affected infants prior to onset of symptoms. The timely completion of each step (i.e., specimen collection, transport, testing, result reporting), is critical for early diagnosis. Goals developed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services' Advisory Committee on Heritable Disorders in Newborns and Children (ACHDNC) for NBS timeliness were adopted (time-critical results reported by five days of life, and non-time-critical results reported by day seven), and implemented into a multi-year quality improvement initiative (NewSTEPS 360) aimed to decrease the time to result reporting and intervention.MethodsThe NBS system from specimen collection through reporting of results was assessed (bloodspot specimen collection, specimen shipping, sample testing, and result reporting). Annual data from 25 participating NBS programs were analyzed; the medians (and interquartile range, IQR) of state-specific percent of specimens that met the goal are presented.ResultsThe percent of specimens collected before 48 hours of life increased from 95% (88-97%) in 2016 to 97% (IQR 92-98%) in 2018 for the 25 states, with 20 (80%) of programs collecting more than 90% of the specimens within 48 hours of birth. Approximately 41% (IQR 29-57%) of specimens were transported within one day of collection. Time-critical result reporting in the first five days of life improved from 49% (IQR 26-74%) in 2016 to 64% (42%-71%) in 2018, and for non-time critical results from 64% (IQR 58%-78%) in 2016 to 81% (IQR 68-91%) in 2018. Laboratories open seven days a week in 2018 reported 95% of time-critical results within five days, compared to those open six days (62%), and five days (45%).ConclusionNBS programs that participated in NewSTEPs 360 made great strides in improving timeliness; however, ongoing quality improvement efforts are needed in order to ensure all infants receive a timely diagnosis.
- Published
- 2020