Salem Magarian MD
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Transcript Salem Magarian MD
Withdrawing the Disparity:
Equitable and Effective Care for Narcotic-Exposed Newborns
within a Hospital and Community Integrated Program
Salem Magarian MD
Dominican Hospital
First 5 Santa Cruz County
Santa Cruz, California
Building a Prenatal to Pediatric
System of care for Narcotic Exposed
Newborns
Salem Magarian MD
Dominican Hospital
First 5 Santa Cruz County
Santa Cruz, California
Overview
• Drug exposed babies experience differences in care and outcomes
• There is huge long term cost to society
• Professional prejudice and variable clinical approaches have
provided only limited solutions
• How can we create an organized system of care—in a real world
with lean budgets and constricted staffing—to diminish or
eliminate this disparity?
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Prior Care for Drug-Exposed Newborns
A decade ago, Santa Cruz County, California lacked a consistent
approach to the care of infants exposed in utero to drugs of abuse.
Several problems were apparent:
• Mothers sought to hide their drug problem
• There were avoidable neonatal complications from the lack of prenatal care
and lack of prior identification for drug-exposed newborns
• Initial hospital stays were prolonged because of largely avoidable or
reducible medical conditions for both the mothers and infants
• There were no clear goals for medical treatment of these infants, no clear
medical practice standards of care, and variable Child Protective Services
practices
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Disparity of Care for Drug-Exposed Newborns
Several problems were apparent (continued):
• Prejudice toward this population existed within many corners of the medical
provider community
• No standard pharmacologic treatment of withdrawal symptoms
• Babies received inconsistent medical follow-up by providers knowledgeable
about this condition
• Many out-patient pharmacy errors
• Child Protective Services, the judicial system, and foster care had poor
integration with prenatal and pediatric care
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Patterns of Prenatal and Hospital Care
Most of these babies:
• Had little prenatal care
• Were not identified prior to delivery
• Had significant risk for adverse perinatal outcomes
• Had challenging psycho-social and custody issues during
the hospital stay
• Had prolonged NICU stays
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Patterns of Follow-Up Pediatric Care
The medical, social, and neurodevelopmental costs were
enormous
Most of these babies:
• Were discharged into highly variable medical and
placement situations
• Experienced multiple ER visits and re-hospitalization
• Had escalating Child Protective Service involvement
• Had a high probability of foster care placement
• Had a high risk for future poor neurodevelopment
outcomes
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Long-Term Societal Costs
Increases in all of the following:
• Medical utilization
• Child protective service intervention
• Foster care
• Developmental and behavioral disabilities
• Special educational interventions
• Juvenile and adult criminal justice involvement
• Generational recidivism
• Lost workplace productivity
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Sneak Preview of The Results
The “word on the street” for drug-abusing pregnant mothers quickly
changed to an understanding that this program is the path to recovery
and keeping your baby
Average initial NICU stay was reduced from 14 to 9 days (35% reduction)
ER visits and re-hospitalization have been essentially eliminated
Most mothers nurse their infants, retain custody, and continue in
recovery
The majority of infants appeared normal on developmental screening
Mothers ask to be in this program
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Importance of Intervention
The financial value to society of quality investment
in early children programs is no longer speculation
“There is an extensive, and rapidly expanding, amount of scientific evidence
illustrating the extent to which early experiences affect the biology of the body,
becoming embedded in the development of multiple organ systems.
As a result, the consequences of adversity early in life can be serious and longlasting, affecting the body’s ability to, for example, regulate metabolism, fight
disease, and maintain a healthy heart—as well as a healthy brain.
Reducing toxic stress in early childhood is therefore an important strategy for
lifelong health promotion and disease prevention.”
- Dr. Jack Shonkoff of Harvard’s Center for the Developing Child
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Importance of Intervention
“A major refocus of policy is required to understand the life cycle of skill and health
formation and the importance of the early years in creating inequality in America. All
capabilities are built on a foundation of capacities that are developed earlier…. Early
intervention lowers the cost of later investment.”
- Nobel Prize winning economist Dr. James Heckman
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Benefits of Early Intervention
Decreasing the disparity of care for drug-exposed infants would result in:
• Individual benefits
• Improved neurodevelopmental outcomes
• Increased personal productivity
• Greater educational and professional achievements
• Systems benefits Financial savings in:
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Medical systems
Child welfare systems
Educational systems
Juvenile and adult justice systems
Adult welfare programs
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Building the Team
• The early team consisted of a pediatrician, a NICU nurse, a
social worker, and a public health nurse, and quickly
included key individuals from the child welfare system
• Dominican Hospital offered its safety net pediatric clinic as
the medical home for all of these drug-exposed babies
• The County Health Department contributed public health
nursing and training for providers, coordinating with drug
rehabilitation programs starting in pregnancy
• The County’s First 5 program funded “Families Together,”
a program to provide support and coaches for high-risk
families with CPS allegations but not leading to foster
placement.
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The Goals
Develop a uniform “clinical pathway” for the care of the
drug exposed infant from prenatal to pediatric care.
The goals seemed simple but ambitious:
1. Minimize in-patient bed days and ER use
2. Minimize time that infants suffer drug withdrawal symptoms
3. Keep babies with their biologic mothers, if safe, and minimize the
number of transitions to new caregivers
4. Infants demonstrate normal growth and development
5. Normal long-term neurodevelopment and child mental health
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Program Changes: Prenatal
All pregnant mothers using drugs of abuse and methadone were offered
drug rehabilitation services.
All mothers with heroin and narcotic issues were offered methadone
treatment.
Prenatal care was concentrated with one obstetrical group.
All mothers were seen by a MCH social worker prior to delivering.
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Program Changes: Newborn Period
All babies were cared for in the NICU and received a standardized
neonatal withdrawal treatment until withdrawal symptoms were
controlled.
All mothers and babies were seen by the MCH social worker on the first
day of life and CPS was notified of the birth. Placement decisions were
made by CPS early in the hospital stay.
All mothers were encouraged and professionally supported to breast feed
unless there was a specific medical contraindication.
All babies were seen by a pediatric occupational therapist.
Infants were discharged when they were medically stable, feeding well,
with withdrawal symptoms controlled for 48 hours.
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Newborn Clinical Pathway
All babies cared for in NICU.
Neonatal abstinence scoring (NAS) every two hours.
Replacement morphine started early at standardized threshold.
Increased morphine every eight hours until NAS scores normalized.
Phenobarbital added only if maximum morphine dose was reached.
Infants were discharged when they were medically stable, feeding well,
with withdrawal symptoms controlled for 48 hours.
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Newborn Clinical Pathway: Medication
Neonatal abstinence scoring (NAS) every two hours. (Finnegan score)
Replacement morphine started early when NAS > 8.
All morphine same concentration .4 mg / ml
Starting dose = .2 mg for all term babies (no weight adjustment)
Increase morphine .1 ml =.04 mg every eight hours until NAS scores
normalized up to .4-.5 mg morphine.
Phenobarbital added only if maximum morphine dose was reached with
NAS still > 8
Phenobarb started at 5 mg/ kg / day without loading dose.
Infants were discharged when they were medically stable, feeding well,
with withdrawal symptoms controlled for 48 hours.
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Program Changes: Pediatrics
Infants were seen the day after discharge in one clinical site, the Dominican
Pediatric Clinic, and then weekly.
All prescriptions from only one pharmacy
2 week supply
Weekly visits for the first two months
The babies were weaned from medication following set guidelines.
Narcotic replacement medication given by all mothers
Standardized developmental screening
ASQ 9 and 24 months
MCHAT at 18 months
All babies were seen by one year of age by the Stanford High-Risk Infant
Follow-up clinic for detailed neuro-developmental assessment.
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Pediatrics Clinical Pathway
Weekly Clinic visits by same provider:
Evaluate weight gain, feeding, neurologic status, parents’ compliance
with recovery program.
Evaluate parenting capacity, mental health, and compliance with
support services
Concurrent visits with occupational therapist for issues of state
regulation and feeding.
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Pediatrics Clinical Pathway
Medication Weaning
No medication changes until one month of age.
Gradual wean of morphine over second month of life
Decrease morphine .1 ml = .04 mg every 3 days
Slow taper only if infant becomes re-symptomatic
If on phenobarb:
When morphine dosage decreased by 50%, cut phenobarb dose in
half. DC phenobarb one week later.
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The Results
The “word on the street” for drug-abusing pregnant mothers quickly
changed to an understanding that this program is the path to recovery
and keeping your baby
Average initial NICU stay was reduced from 14 to 9 days
ER visits and re-hospitalization have been essentially eliminated
Most mothers nurse their infants, retain custody, and continue in
recovery
The majority of infants appeared normal on developmental screening
Mothers ask to be in this program
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The Long Term Future Savings
• Hospital costs savings
• Health plan savings
• Follow-Up Early intervention saving
• School system special services saving
• Juvenile justice saving
• Adult criminal justice / incarceration savings
• Increased long term work productivity
• Decreased inter-generational recidivism
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Summary
• This was a spontaneously evolving hospital and community-based care path
that addressed significant disparities in care for drug exposed newborns.
• The outcome was medical care cost savings, less foster care placement,
improved infant health, better maternal attachment, and long term healthy
neurodevelopment.
“The short term financial savings [of this program]—even without
the projected long term savings to society—would make a
compelling case for adoption. The enhancement of human quality
of life is not quantitatively measurable, but intuitively substantial.
… This is exactly the kind of direct, adaptive, clinical team
learning—driven by a patient centered mission and fueled by
community partnerships—that QI leaders crave for a reforming
health care system”
- Dr. Wells Shoemaker
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Contact Me
Salem Magarian MD
• Medical Director, Dominican Pediatric Clinic
Dominican Hospital
Santa Cruz, CA 95065
• Phone: (831) 457-7038
• Email: [email protected]
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