Stringer Marilyn, Lazzeri Jessica, Giordano Nicholas A, Polomano Rosemary C, Quigley Elizabeth, Ohnishi Bonnie Renner, Fray Marianne, Dunlevey Elizabeth, Hoffman Roy, Christ Lori
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Worldviews Evid Based Nurs. 2025 Jun;22(3):e70022. doi: 10.1111/wvn.70022.
Sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) is a leading cause of infant mortality in the United States. Hospitals have implemented infant safe sleep programs with varying measures and degrees of success, but few have demonstrated improvements in hospital-based and home safe sleep practices with nurse subject matter experts (SMEs) and community SUID prevention campaigns.
This project evaluated the impact of a state-wide, evidence-based infant safe sleep program for birthing hospitals using nurse SMEs and a community awareness campaign on nurse knowledge, safe sleep environments, and trends in infant sleep-related deaths.
Between 2016 and 2021, a pre- and post-test quality improvement intervention-based design was used to enroll hospitals and train and embed SMEs to educate peers, conduct practice surveillance and audits, and address practice deviations. A website housed comprehensive resources, and a large-scale community-based social and print media campaign on safe sleep practices occurred. Nurse and practice data from 12 hospitals that fully implemented the program were compared pre- and post-implementation. State-wide survey data for key safe sleep indicators reported by parents were compared from our 12 birthing hospitals to other facilities.
Of trained nurses (N = 902), 83.4% reported making substantial or exceptional progress in being proactive in surveillance of safe sleep environments. Pre- and post-implementation environmental audits showed a significantly higher proportion of infants in safe sleep positions post-implementation (94.3%) than pre-implementation (89.6%) (p = 0.001). Statewide survey data from birth parents discharged from our program hospitals significantly outperformed those discharged from other state facilities. Multi-media campaigns resulted in over 1.4 million impressions on our website. Sleep-related deaths for infants born at four program hospitals dropped 16.1% from 31 in 2018 to 26 in 2021.
A safe sleep program improved hospital-based nurses' knowledge and practice and birth parent's knowledge and behaviors, and it was associated with a decrease in infant sleep-related deaths.
婴儿猝死综合征(SUID)是美国婴儿死亡的主要原因。医院已实施了不同措施和不同程度成功的婴儿安全睡眠计划,但很少有计划通过护士主题专家(SMEs)和社区SUID预防活动在医院和家庭安全睡眠实践方面取得改善。
本项目评估了一项针对分娩医院的全州范围、基于证据的婴儿安全睡眠计划的影响,该计划利用护士SMEs和社区宣传活动,以了解护士知识、安全睡眠环境以及婴儿睡眠相关死亡趋势。
在2016年至2021年期间,采用基于前后测试质量改进干预的设计,招募医院并培训和嵌入SMEs,以教育同行、进行实践监测和审核,并处理实践偏差。一个网站提供了全面的资源,并开展了大规模的基于社区的安全睡眠实践社会和印刷媒体宣传活动。对12家全面实施该计划的医院的护士和实践数据在实施前后进行了比较。将我们12家分娩医院报告的父母关于关键安全睡眠指标的全州调查数据与其他机构的数据进行了比较。
在接受培训的护士(N = 902)中,83.4%报告在积极监测安全睡眠环境方面取得了实质性或显著进展。实施前后的环境审核显示,实施后处于安全睡眠姿势的婴儿比例(94.3%)显著高于实施前(89.6%)(p = 0.001)。我们项目医院出院的新生儿父母的全州调查数据明显优于其他州机构出院的新生儿父母的数据。多媒体宣传活动在我们的网站上产生了超过140万次的印象。四家项目医院出生的婴儿的睡眠相关死亡从2018年的31例下降到2021年的26例,降幅为16.1%。
一项安全睡眠计划改善了医院护士的知识和实践以及新生儿父母的知识和行为,并且与婴儿睡眠相关死亡的减少有关。