Physician Perceptions on Quality of Life and Resuscitation Preferences for Extremely Early Newborns.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Physician Perceptions on Quality of Life and Resuscitation Preferences for Extremely Early Newborns.
Authors: LoRe, Danielle1 del9082@nyp.org, Mattson, Christopher2, Feltman, Dalia M.3, Fry, Jessica T.4, Brennan, Kathleen G.1, Arnolds, Marin3
Source: American Journal of Perinatology. 2023, Vol. 40 Issue 10, p1126-1134. 9p.
Subject Terms: *MATERNAL health services, *PREMATURE infants, *ACADEMIC medical centers, *CONFIDENCE intervals, *HOSPITAL medical staff, *CROSS-sectional method, *PHYSICIANS' attitudes, *SURVEYS, *QUALITY of life, *DESCRIPTIVE statistics, *RESUSCITATION, *NEONATOLOGY, *LOGISTIC regression analysis, *ODDS ratio, *PHYSICIANS, *NEONATOLOGISTS
Abstract: Objective The study aimed to explore physician views on whether extremely early newborns will have an acceptable quality of life (QOL), and if these views are associated with physician resuscitation preferences. Study Design We performed a cross-sectional survey of neonatologists and maternal fetal medicine (MFM) attendings, fellows, and residents at four U.S. medical centers exploring physician views on future QOL of extremely early newborns and physician resuscitation preferences. Mixed-effects logistic regression models examined association of perceived QOL and resuscitation preferences when adjusting for specialty, level of training, gender, and experience with ex-premature infants. Results A total of 254 of 544 (47%) physicians were responded. A minority of physicians had interacted with surviving extremely early newborns when they were ≥3 years old (23% of physicians in pediatrics/neonatology and 6% in obstetrics/MFM). The majority of physicians did not believe an extremely early newborn would have an acceptable QOL at the earliest gestational ages (11% at 22 and 23% at 23 weeks). The majority of physicians (73%) believed that having an extremely preterm infant would have negative effects on the family's QOL. Mixed-effects logistic regression models (odds ratio [OR], 95% confidence interval [CI]) revealed that physicians who believed infants would have an acceptable QOL were less likely to offer comfort care only at 22 (OR: 0.19, 95% CI: 0.05–0.65, p < 0.01) and 23 weeks (OR: 0.24, 95% CI: 0.07–0.78, p < 0.02). They were also more likely to offer active treatment only at 24 weeks (OR: 9.66, 95% CI: 2.56–38.87, p < 0.01) and 25 weeks (OR: 19.51, 95% CI: 3.33–126.72, p < 0.01). Conclusion Physician views of extremely early newborns' future QOL correlated with self-reported resuscitation preferences. Residents and obstetric physicians reported more pessimistic views on QOL. Key Points Views of QOL varied by specialty and level of training. Contact with former extremely early newborns was limited. QOL views were associated with preferred resuscitation practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Academic Search Complete
More Details
ISSN:07351631
DOI:10.1055/s-0041-1733782
Published in:American Journal of Perinatology
Language:English