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Short Report

Introduction of the neonatal sepsis calculator at a low-dependency special care nursery in Australia

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Pages 7532-7535 | Received 05 Dec 2020, Accepted 30 Jun 2021, Published online: 06 Aug 2021
 

Abstract

Background

The neonatal early onset sepsis calculator (Sepsis Calculator) is a screening tool for managing neonates at risk of early onset sepsis (EOS). In large tertiary centers it has been found to reduce empiric antibiotic use in newborns with suspected EOS by up to half, without missing EOS confirmed by blood culture.

Aims

To evaluate the effect of implementation of the Sepsis Calculator at a low-dependency special care nursery in Australia on rates of antibiotic treatment for suspected EOS in newborns, and, to determine the compliance rate in applying the Sepsis Calculator.

Methods

We undertook a retrospective medical record audit at The Women’s at Sandringham Hospital during two two-month periods; pre- and post-introduction of the Sepsis Calculator. The management of infants suspected of EOS and length of stay post-delivery were compared. Compliance with Sepsis Calculator use was measured.

Results

526 infants were included: 266 in period 1 and 260 in period 2. There was no significant change in the proportion of infants who received empirical antibiotics for suspected EOS following introduction of the Sepsis Calculator (6 of 266 during period 1; 2.2% vs. 8 of 260 during period 2; 3.1%; p = .558). The median length of stay (LOS) of infants born to GBS positive mothers who received inadequate antibiotic prophylaxis, decreased from 39.5 h (IQR 28.4 to 47.4) to 25.5 h (IQR 22.2 to 34.2), p = .004 after Sepsis Calculator implementation. The compliance rate for Sepsis Calculator use was 82.3% (214 of 260).

Conclusions

While we did not see a reduction in empirical antibiotic use, this is likely due to the already low baseline antibiotic treatment rate at our institution. Further exploration of how the calculator benefits infants and improves care in non-tertiary special care nurseries, including evaluating LOS, is needed.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no conflict of interest.

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