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Notes:

Page 33

Volume 5

Journal of Pediatric Care

ISSN: 2471-805X

JOINT EVENT

Neonatology 2019

Pediatrics Surgery 2019

April 23-24, 2019

April 23-24, 2019 London, UK

&

23

rd

Edition of International Conference on

Neonatology and Perinatology

4

th

International Conference on

Pediatrics and Pediatric Surgery

Decrease suspected sepsis work-up and empirical antibiotic use in newborns

35 weeks with implementing

the early-onset sepsis (EOS) calculator in a newborn nursery

Ke-Ni Niko Tien, Firas Saker, Colleen Schelzig, John McDonnell, Stephanie Jennings, Tina Di Fiore

and

Suet Kam Lam

Cleveland Clinic- Hillcrest Hospital, USA

Background:

Antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed medications in the neonatal population throughout the

country, especially in well appearing infants in the first few days of life. Many undesirable consequences have been

associated with unnecessary sepsis evaluations and antibiotic exposure. In our institution, those infants who were

born to mothers with chorioamnionitis diagnoses, we obtained blood work at birth including complete blood count

with differential (CBC/d), blood culture and initiated empiric antibiotics. Repeated CBC/d along with C-reactive

protein (CRP) was collected at twenty four hours of life. Additionally, infants who were born to mothers with

prolonged rupture of membranes (PROM) also received the same laboratory evaluation without empiric antibiotics.

Methods:

The Kaiser Early-Onset Sepsis (EOS) calculator was implemented on June 1, 2018 in the newborn nursery

to newborns born to mothers with chorioamnionitis, PROM and preterm infants born to mothers with unknown

GBS or GBS+ but inadequately treated.

Results:

We have effectively decreased the antibiotic usage rate (AUR), blood work evaluations and the lengths

of hospital stay since June 1, 2018. During the first three month period, our sepsis laboratory evaluation rate on

asymptomatic infants with risk factors decreased from 100% to 15.7% and the empiric antibiotic use decreased from

100% to 2.9%.

Discussion:

Initial challenges we encountered with planning and implementing the EOS calculator were concerns

regarding a drastic practice change and the fear of missing treatment for possible sepsis. With careful interdisciplinary

planning and education, ensuring proper team notification and consult for all infants at risk, usage of the EOS

calculator and close follow-up, provider support gradually improved.

Biography

Ke-Ni N Tien has been in neonatal clinical practice since 1991, having worked in Taiwan and some of the nation’s top ranked Neonatal Intensive Care Units.

She currently serves as a Neonatal Nurse Practitioner (NNP) full-time with Cleveland Clinic Children’s and part-time with Johns Hopkins Children’s Center. She

has completed her Master of Science in Nursing at Arizona State University in 2007 and is currently a Doctoral candidate in nursing practice (DNP) with the

University of Maryland. Her interests concentrate on the synthesis of neonatal research, education and quality improvement projects, transforming data driven

interdisciplinary team approaches into tangible improvement outcomes.

niko0929@yahoo.com

Ke-Ni Niko Tien et al., J Pediatr Care 2019, Volume 5

DOI: 10.21767/2471-805X-C1-021