Division of Obstetrics and Prenatal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Centre Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
BJOG. 2010 Aug;117(9):1098-107. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02611.x. Epub 2010 May 25.
To determine whether delivery in the evening or at night and some organisational features of maternity units are related to perinatal adverse outcome.
A 7-year national registry-based cohort study.
All 99 Dutch hospitals.
From nontertiary hospitals (n = 88), 655 961 singleton deliveries from 32 gestational weeks onwards, and, from tertiary centres (n = 10), 108 445 singleton deliveries from 22 gestational weeks onwards.
Multiple logistic regression analysis of national perinatal registration data over the period 2000-2006. In addition, multilevel analysis was applied to investigate whether the effects of time of delivery and other variables systematically vary across different hospitals.
Delivery-related perinatal mortality (intrapartum or early neonatal mortality) and combined delivery-related perinatal adverse outcome (any of the following: intrapartum or early neonatal mortality, 5-minute Apgar score below 7, or admission to neonatal intensive care).
After case mix adjustment, relative to daytime, increased perinatal mortality was found in nontertiary hospitals during the evening (OR, 1.32; 95% CI, 1.15-1.52) and at night (OR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.28-1.69) and, in tertiary centres, at night only (OR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.06-1.37). Similar significant effects were observed using the combined perinatal adverse outcome measure. Multilevel analysis was unsuccessful; extending the initial analysis with nominal hospital effects and hospital-delivery time interaction effects confirmed the significant effect of night in nontertiary hospitals, whereas other organisational effects (nontertiary, tertiary) were taken up by the hospital terms.
Hospital deliveries at night are associated with increased perinatal mortality and adverse perinatal outcome. The time of delivery and other organisational features representing experience (seniority of staff, volume) explain hospital-to-hospital variation.
确定分娩时间(傍晚或夜间)和产科病房的某些组织特征是否与围产儿不良结局相关。
一项基于 7 年全国登记的队列研究。
荷兰所有 99 家医院。
来自非三级医院(n=88)的 32 孕周以上的 655961 例单胎分娩,来自三级中心(n=10)的 22 孕周以上的 108445 例单胎分娩。
对 2000-2006 年期间全国围产儿登记数据进行多变量逻辑回归分析。此外,还应用多水平分析来调查分娩时间和其他变量的影响是否在不同医院之间存在系统差异。
与分娩相关的围产儿死亡率(产时或早期新生儿死亡率)和与分娩相关的围产儿不良结局综合指标(以下任何一种情况:产时或早期新生儿死亡率、5 分钟 Apgar 评分<7 分或新生儿重症监护病房收治)。
在病例组合调整后,与白天相比,非三级医院傍晚(OR=1.32,95%CI:1.15-1.52)和夜间(OR=1.47,95%CI:1.28-1.69)分娩时围产儿死亡率增加,而在三级中心仅夜间分娩时(OR=1.20,95%CI:1.06-1.37)围产儿死亡率增加。使用围产儿不良结局综合指标也观察到了类似的显著影响。多水平分析不成功;在初始分析中扩展名义医院效应和医院分娩时间交互效应,证实了非三级医院夜间分娩与围产儿死亡率增加相关,而其他组织效应(非三级、三级)则由医院术语解释。
医院夜间分娩与围产儿死亡率和不良围产儿结局增加相关。分娩时间和代表经验的其他组织特征(工作人员的资历、工作量)解释了医院间的差异。