Neonatal stabilization score. A quantitative method of auditing medical care in transported newborns weighing less than 1,000 g at birth.

1986 
A reduction in newborn (NB) mortality is contingent on efforts of NB stabilization. The authors attempted to quantify stabilization into a score, the neonatal stabilization score (NSS) that correlates with outcome. The population for the study comprised 192 transported NBs who weighed less than 1,000 g at birth moved from level 1 hospitals in New York City during 5 years, 1977-1981. The NSS score was based on five components: vital signs, laboratory investigations, respiratory support, I.V. fluid administration, and specific managements. Each was rated 0, 1, or 2. A maximum score of 10 indicated excellent stabilization. Analyses for the validity and reliability of the NSS included the Mantel-Haenszel test (which controlled for birth weight and Apgar) and measurement of interrater agreement "JOURNAL/mcar/04.02/00005650-198602000-00008/ENTITY_OV0445/v/2017-07-25T092606Z/r/image-png" (kappa statistic). Mortality rates were lower in those with higher NSS and odds of death were 2.39 times greater in NB with low NSS (X2 = 5.16; P < 0.025). The calculated index of agreement JOURNAL/mcar/04.02/00005650-198602000-00008/ENTITY_OV0445/v/2017-07-25T092606Z/r/image-png on 16 charts represented an excellent agreement beyond chance (JOURNAL/mcar/04.02/00005650-198602000-00008/ENTITY_OV0445/v/2017-07-25T092606Z/r/image-png = 0.76, P < 0.01).
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