Alabama Administrative Code
Title 410 - STATE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Chapter 410-2-3 - SPECIALTY SERVICES
Section 410-2-3-.02 - Neonatal Services
Universal Citation: AL Admin Code R 410-2-3-.02
Current through Register Vol. 42, No. 11, August 30, 2024
(1) Discussion
(a) A leading indicator of the
health status of a state's citizens is the infant mortality rate. Alabama has
one of the highest rates in the country. In order to have an impact on infant
mortality, the State must make neonatal care accessible and enhance that care
which is available.
(b) In an
effort to see that babies are delivered at the most appropriate hospital
depending on the level of care needed, the Alabama Department of Public Health
(ADPH) convened a multidisciplinary stakeholder group to review the most recent
perinatal guidelines published by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and
provided recommendations. The group developed the Alabama Perinatal
Regionalization System Guidelines to help clarify the expectations of hospitals
and their staff for each level of care, and these Guidelines were approved by
both the State Perinatal Advisory Committee and the State Committee of Public
Health. Each year, hospitals will use the Alabama Perinatal Regionalization
System Guidelines, along with the accompanying verbiage from the AAP-Levels of
Neonatal Care, to self-declare the level of neonatal services provided (by
completion of the State Health Planning and Development Agency (SHPDA) Hospital
Annual Report.
(http:www.alabamapublichealth.gov/perinatal/assets/perinatal_regionalization_system_guidelines.pdf).
(c) Neonatal service providers are designated
as Well Newborn Nursery (Level I); Special Care Nursery (Level II); NICU (Level
III); or Regional NICU (Level IV) depending on their capabilities and
expertise.
1. A Well Newborn Nursery (Level I)
should have the following capabilities and provider types:
(i) Capabilities. Evaluate and provide
postnatal care to stable term newborn infants; stabilize and provide care for
infants born 35 - 37 weeks gestation that remain physiologically stable;
stabilize newborn infants who are ill and those born at less than 35 weeks
gestation until transfer to a higher level of care; and have staff trained in
neonatal resuscitation in house for deliveries.
(ii) Provider Types. Pediatricians, family
physicians, nurse practitioners, and other advanced practice registered nurses
(with relevant experience, training, and demonstrated competence in perinatal
care).
(iii) Responsibilities.
Surveillance and care of all patients admitted to the obstetric service, with
an established triage system for identifying high-risk patients who should be
transferred to a facility that provides specialty or subspecialty care; proper
detection and initial care of unanticipated maternal-fetal problems that occur
during labor and delivery; capability to perform cesarean delivery within 30
minutes of the decision to do so; availability of appropriate anesthesia,
radiology, ultrasound, laboratory and blood bank services on a 24-hour basis;
care of postpartum conditions; resuscitation and stabilization of all neonates
born in the hospital; evaluation and continuing care of healthy neonates in a
nursery or with their mothers until discharge; adequate nursery facilities and
support for stabilization of small or ill neonates before transfer to a
specialty or subspecialty facility; consultation and transfer arrangements;
parentsibling-neonate visitation; and data collection and retrieval.
2. Special Care Nursery (Level II)
providers should have:
(i) Capabilities. Level
I capabilities plus: provide care for infants born greater than or equal to 32
weeks gestation and weighing greater than or equal to 1,500 grams who have
physiologic immaturity or who are moderately ill with problems that are
expected to resolve rapidly and are not anticipated to need subspecialty
services on an urgent basis; provide care for infants convalescing after
intensive care; provide mechanical ventilation for brief duration (less than 24
hours) or continuous positive airway pressure or both; and stabilize infants
born before 32 weeks gestation and weighing less than 1,500 grams until
transfer to a neonatal intensive care facility.
(ii) Provider Types. Level I health care
providers plus: pediatric hospitalists, neonatologists, and neonatal nurse
practitioners.
(iii)
Responsibilities. Provision of some enhanced services as well as basic care
services as described in 1(c); care of appropriate high-risk women and fetuses,
both admitted and transferred from other facilities; stabilization of severely
ill newborns before transfer; treatment of moderately ill larger preterm and
term newborns; and data collection and retrieval.
3. Subspecialty (Level III) providers should
have:
(i) Capabilities. Level II capabilities
plus: provide sustained life support; provide comprehensive care for infants
born less than 32 weeks gestation and weighing less than 1,500 grams and
infants born at all gestational ages and birth weights with critical illness;
provide prompt and readily available access to a full range of pediatric
medical subspecialists, pediatric surgical specialists, pediatric
anesthesiologists, and pediatric ophthalmologists at the site or by prearranged
consultative agreement; provide a full range of respiratory support that may
include conventional and/or high-frequency ventilation and inhaled nitric
oxide; and perform advanced imaging, with interpretation on an urgent basis,
including computed tomography, MRI, and echocardiography.
(ii) Provider Types. Pediatric medical
subspecialists, pediatric anesthesiologists, pediatric surgeons, and pediatric
ophthalmologists at the site or a closely related institution by prearranged
agreement.
(iii) Responsibilities.
Provision of comprehensive perinatal care services for both admitted and
transferred women and neonates of all risk categories, including basic and
specialty care services as described previously; evaluation of new technologies
and therapies; and data collection and retrieval. Neonatal services must
continue to receive regional planning.
4. Regional NICU (Level IV) providers should
have:
(i) Capabilities. Level III capabilities
plus: located within an institution with the capability to provide surgical
repair of complex congenital or acquired conditions (e.g. congenital cardiac
malformations that require cardiopulmonary bypass with or without
extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; maintain a full range of pediatric medical
subspecialists, pediatric surgical subspecialists, and pediatric
anesthesiologist consultants continuously available 24 hours a day; facilitate
transport, and provide outreach education.
(ii) Provider Types. Level III health care
providers plus pediatric surgical subspecialists.
(iii) Responsibilities. Provision of
comprehensive perinatal health care services at and above those of NICU (Level
III) facilities; responsibility for regional perinatal health care service
organization and coordination including: maternal and neonatal transport;
outreach support and regional educational programs, research support and
initial evaluation of new technologies and therapies; and analysis and
evaluation of regional data, including those on perinatal complications and
outcomes.
(2) Planning Policies
(a) In order to ensure that appropriate
prenatal and neonatal services are available in Alabama:
1. Each of the five (5) ADPH designated
regional perinatal centers will have a high-risk nursery.
2. The State Perinatal Advisory Committee
will continue to advise the State Health Officer in the planning, organization,
and evaluation of the Perinatal Program, which will address the coordination of
services to improve pre-conceptional, inter-conceptional and prenatal health
for women at high risk for poor outcomes of pregnancy.
3. The Alabama Perinatal Program will
facilitate state, regional and local/community collaboration, interest and
action regarding health care needs and services to reduce maternal, and
childhood morbidity and mortality.
4. The Alabama Perinatal Program will assess
the quality and effectiveness of the health care systems for women and infants
through the collection, analysis and reporting of data.
5. The State should continue to strengthen
the Alabama Perinatal Program to implement programs that address
recommendations issued by the State Perinatal Advisory Council (SPAC) in 2002:
(i) Public Awareness Campaigns
(ii) Smoking Cessation
Interventions
(iii) Statewide Fetal
Infant Mortality Review Teams
(iv)
Evidence-Based Medicine/Best Practices
(v) Regionalization of Perinatal
Care
(vi) Care Coordination
Services
(vii) Transportation for
Women and Infants
(viii)
Comprehensive Care for Women of Childbearing Age
(ix) UAB MCH Program Endowed Chair
6. The State should implement the
strategies introduced by the Alabama Perinatal Program in the Alabama Perinatal
Health Act Annual Progress Report for FY2018 Plan for FY 2019:
(i) Expand evidence-based home visitation
services.
(ii) Increase utilization
of the Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SIBRT) tool to
identify and refer women at risk for alcohol, substance abuse, domestic
violence, and post-partum depression for treatment and services.
(iii) Promote safe sleep awareness through
education and collaboration.
(iv)
Expand the Well-Woman Program so that women of child-bearing age receive
pre-conception and interconception health as a means to address chronic health
conditions before and between pregnancies.
7. Provide education to women and families on
the benefits of breastfeeding for both mom and baby.
8. Promote and improve the system of
perinatal regionalization which is designed to ensure women have access to
hospitals equipped to provide the most appropriate level of care for their
pregnancy needs.
9. Educate
healthcare providers and women who have experienced a spontaneous preterm birth
about benefits, processes, and access to 17P (Hydroxyprogesterone Caproate), a
hormone treatment prescribed to reduce the risk of a subsequent spontaneous
preterm birth.
10. The State should
continue to implement all sections of the federal Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act that affect prenatal and neonatal services.
11. The State should improve the
accessibility of services for maternity and pediatric patients through
expansion and improvement of services to women and children.
The State should work to improve the percentage of overall participation in newborn screenings.
Author: Statewide Health Coordinating Council (SHCC)
Statutory Authority: Code of Ala. 1975, § 22-21-260(4).
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