The Contribution of Withholding or Withdrawing Care to Newborn Mortality
- 1 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 116 (6), 1487-1491
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2005-0392
Abstract
Objective. We sought to determine the contribution of withholding or withdrawing care to neonatal mortality in our hospital over a 10-year period from 1993 through 2002. Background. Although not initiating or withholding intensive care for certain newborns has been practiced openly for the past 25 years, little information has been published concerning the results of these practices on neonatal mortality. Design and Methods. All infants who were born in our hospital and remained in the hospital until their death were evaluated for the care they received at the time of birth and near the time of their death. The contribution of not initiating care or withdrawing care to the neonatal mortality rates in our hospital was determined. Information was obtained directly from the patients' charts as well as the neonatal database and monthly neonatal mortality and morbidity review. Other information, if needed, was obtained from the monthly ethics committee reviews of all nursery deaths. Information was collected relating to birth weight, gestational age, diagnosis, time of death, and year of death. Hospital and neonatal unit protocols were evaluated to determine how closely they were followed. Results. During the 10-year period, 380 deaths (0.8%) of a total of 47820 live births occurred in our hospital. Care was not initiated or was withdrawn in close to 72% of those deaths; total care until death occurred in 28%. Total care for infants who died over the 10-year period decreased markedly as care not initiated or care withdrawn increased. Most of this increase in not initiating care and in withdrawal of care was in the smaller of the extremely low birth weight infants. Conclusions. The majority of nursery deaths of infants born in our hospital occurred as the result of selected noninitiating of care or as a result of withdrawing care in infants not responding or considered to have a futile outcome. Only slightly more than one quarter of the infants received total care until the time of deathKeywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Two-Year Outcome of Infants Weighing 600 Grams or Less at Birth and Born 1994 Through 1998Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2003
- Two-year outcome of infants weighing 600 grams or less at birth and born 1994 through 1998Published by Wolters Kluwer Health ,2003
- Looking back in time: outcome of a national cohort of very preterm infants born in The Netherlands in 1983Early Human Development, 2000
- Analgesia for Dying Infants Whose Life Support Is Withdrawn or WithheldPediatrics, 1997
- Withholding and withdrawing life sustaining treatment in neonatal intensive care: issues for the 1990s.Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal & Neonatal, 1994
- Moral and Ethical Dilemmas in the Special-Care NurseryNew England Journal of Medicine, 1973