Facilitating Safe Transition to Home for Preterm Infants - a National Database Study
NCT06284044 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 250000
Last updated 2025-09-08
Summary
Preterm infants (i.e. born before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy) often require additional care and are admitted to neonatal units. Readiness for discharge home typically requires a level of physiological maturity, such that an infant is: 1) able to breathe spontaneously without additional support; 2) able to maintain body temperature; 3) able to take all nutritional requirements orally; 4) weighs ≥1700 grams and is consistently gaining weight.
Staying in the hospital longer than necessary can be detrimental to infants, stressful for families, and costly to the NHS. Reducing the length of stay by just one day would be meaningful to parents and could save the UK National Health Service (NHS) almost £25million per year. Currently little is known about whether, how long and why preterm infants stay in hospital beyond the point at which they are physiologically ready for discharge.
This study will use data from babies' medical records from the whole of England and Wales to identify the age and postmenstrual age when preterm infants reach each of the physiological barriers to discharge and identify which physiological discharge barrier requires preterm infants to remain in hospital the longest. The study will quantify the difference between the time preterm infants become physiologically ready for discharge and actual discharge home and describe factors associated with extended stays.
Conditions
- Premature Birth
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Shalini Ojha, PhD · University of Nottingham
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 22 Weeks
- Max Age
- 36 Weeks
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2023-12-01
- Primary Completion
- 2024-11-30
- Completion
- 2025-08-01
Countries
- United Kingdom
Study Locations
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