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High Healthcare Use at Age 5 Years in a European Cohort of Children Born Very Preterm

journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-14, 17:02 authored by AV Seppänen, ES Draper, S Petrou, H Barros, AM Aubert, L Andronis, SW Kim, RF Maier, P Pedersen, J Gadzinowski, J Lebeer, U Ådén, L Toome, A van Heijst, M Cuttini, J Zeitlin
Objectives
To describe parent-reported healthcare service use at age 5 years in children born very preterm and investigate whether perinatal and social factors and the use of very preterm follow-up services are associated with high service use.

Study design
We used data from an area-based cohort of births at <32 weeks of gestation from 11 European countries, collected from birth records and parental questionnaires at 5 years of age. Using the published literature, we defined high use of outpatient/inpatient care (≥4 sick visits to general practitioners, pediatricians, or nurses, ≥3 emergency room visits, or ≥1 overnight hospitalization) and specialist care (≥2 different specialists or ≥3 visits). We also categorized countries as having either a high or a low rate of children using very preterm follow-up services at age 5 years.

Results
Overall, 43% of children had high outpatient/inpatient care use and 48% had high specialist care use during the previous year. Perinatal factors were associated with high outpatient/inpatient and specialist care use, with a more significant association with specialist services. Associations with intermediate parental educational level and unemployment were stronger for outpatient/inpatient services. Living in a country with higher rates of very preterm follow-up service use was associated with lower use of outpatient/inpatient services.

Conclusions
Children born very preterm had high healthcare service use at age 5 years, with different patterns for outpatient/inpatient and specialist care by perinatal and social factors. Longer follow-up of children born very preterm may improve care coordination and help avoid undesirable health service use.

History

Citation

Journal of Pediatrics, 221. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2021.12.006

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Pediatrics

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0022-3476

eissn

1097-6833

Acceptance date

2021-12-09

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-12-16

Language

eng

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