Login / Signup

Premature Babies Can Be Cared for in the Maternity Ward without an Increased Risk and Discharged with a Feeding Tube If Necessary.

Lea RöschEdda HofstätterFranziska Krasnitzer-LeitnerMartin Wald
Published in: Children (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
In general, premature babies are discharged home when they reach full self-feeding. We established a discharge management protocol which allows for discharging late preterm babies with a feeding tube if necessary. This retrospective study included 108 preterm infants (34+ weeks) born in 2019 and 2020. The preterm infants discharged with a feeding tube ( n = 32) were born at 35.23 weeks' gestation (±0.884), with a birth weight of 2423 g (±375.1), and were discharged at 7.22 days (±3.63) and had a weight of 3466 g (±591.3) at the first outpatient visit around the expected birth date. The preterm infants discharged without a feeding tube were born at 35.97 weeks' gestation (±0.702) with a birth weight of 2589 g (±424.84), discharged home at 6.82 days (±7.11) and a weight of 3784 g (±621.8) at the first outpatient visit. The gestational week and birth weight were statistically significantly different between the groups, with a p -value of <0.001 for each, and the length of hospital stay ( p = 0.762) and weight at follow-up ( p = 0.064) did not significantly differ. No infant required tube-feeding at the time of the first outpatient visit, i.e., the time of expected birth. Therefore, with well-thought-out management, it is possible and safe to discharge preterm infants home with a feeding tube.
Keyphrases
  • gestational age
  • birth weight
  • preterm infants
  • preterm birth
  • low birth weight
  • healthcare
  • weight gain
  • body mass index
  • physical activity
  • randomized controlled trial
  • clinical trial
  • body weight