2020
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-17436/v1
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Neonatal transitional support with intact umbilical cord in assisted vaginal deliveries: A quality-improvement cohort study

Abstract: Background: Deferring cord clamping has proven benefits for both term and preterm infants, and recent studies have demonstrated better cardio-respiratory stability if clamping is based on the infant’s physiology, and whether the infant has breathed. Nevertheless, current guidelines for neonatal resuscitation still recommend early cord clamping (ECC) for compromised babies, unless equipment and competent personnel to resuscitate the baby are available at the mother’s bedside. The objective of this quality impro… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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References 18 publications
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“…Recent examples include the implementation of a delivery room QI bundle including DCC, which was associated with reduced rates of mechanical ventilation during NICU admission of infants <32 weeks [71]. Using simulation to introduce mobile resuscitation equipment in the delivery room essentially eliminated ECC in term and near-term vaginal deliveries at another site [72]. QI initiatives have also been helpful in resource-constrained settings to increase rates of DCC [73].…”
Section: Overcoming Challenges To Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent examples include the implementation of a delivery room QI bundle including DCC, which was associated with reduced rates of mechanical ventilation during NICU admission of infants <32 weeks [71]. Using simulation to introduce mobile resuscitation equipment in the delivery room essentially eliminated ECC in term and near-term vaginal deliveries at another site [72]. QI initiatives have also been helpful in resource-constrained settings to increase rates of DCC [73].…”
Section: Overcoming Challenges To Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%