Special care nurseries: admitting to a policy.
- 19 November 1983
- Vol. 287 (6404) , 1524-1527
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.287.6404.1524
Abstract
Few criteria exist for identifying which babies merit special nursing care, and many asymptomatic babies are offered such care unnecessarily. Birth weight is usually used to identify babies in need of special care at birth, but gestational age is a better discriminator. Babies of more than 35 weeks' gestation do not normally require admission to a special care nursery. Those preterm babies who are admitted can usually be discharged at 37 weeks' gestation even if they still weigh less than 2000 g.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- INFANTS WEIGHING 1·8-2·5 kg: SHOULD THEY BE CARED FOR IN NEONATAL UNITS OR POSTNATAL WARDS?The Lancet, 1982
- WHEN SHOULD PRE-TERM BABIES BE SENT HOME FROM NEONATAL UNITS?The Lancet, 1979
- Rapid assessment of gestational age at birth.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1976
- HOME NURSING OF PREMATURE BABIES IN NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNEThe Lancet, 1948
- Care of Children in HospitalBMJ, 1947