Back Transport of Neonates: Improved Efficiency of Tertiary Nursery Bed Utilization

Abstract
Neonatal back transport is defined as the return of previously critically ill [human] neonates from level III newborn intensive care units to level II and level I nurseries for intermediate and/or convalescing care. During 1980, 172 infants (65% of eligible infants) were back transported from a level III nursery to both level I and level II community hospitals. Infants who were returned to level II hospitals tended to be smaller at the time of transfer, were less frequently nipple fed, and more frequently required O2 supplementation compared with infants returned to level I hospitals. Back transport permitted physicians to defer 3892 days of hospitalization for these infants to community hospitals, an equivalent savings of approximately 10 hospital beds at full occupancy. This resulted in a 44% reduction in the need for services in the newborn intensive care unit. Back transport is an efficient means of dealing with overcrowding of level III nurseries.

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