Rising health care costs challenge governments, payers, and providers in delivering health care services. Tremendous pressures result to deliver better quality care while simultaneously reducing costs. This has led to a wholesale re-examination of current practice methods, including explicit consideration of efficiency and waste. Traditionally, reductions in the costs of care have been considered as independent, and sometimes even antithetical, to the practice of high-quality, intensive medicine. However, it is evident that provision of evidence-based, locally relevant care can result in improved outcomes, lower resource utilization, and opportunities to reallocate resources. This is particularly relevant to the practice of neonatology. In the United States, 12% of the annual birth cohort is affected by preterm birth, and 3% is affected by congenital anomalies. Both of these conditions are associated with costly health care during, and often long after, the NICU admission. We will discuss how 3 drivers of clinical practice in neonatal care (evidence-based medicine, evidence-based economics, and quality improvement) can together optimize clinical and fiscal outcomes.
Evidence, Quality, and Waste: Solving the Value Equation in Neonatology
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Dr Horbar is the Chief Executive and Scientific Officer, Vermont Oxford Network (VON), Burlington, Vermont; Dr Zupancic has served as a faculty for VON Neonatal Intensive Care Quality (NICQ) and iNICQ Quality Improvement Collaboratives and received honoraria for this participation; and Drs Dukhovny, Pursley, and Kirpalani have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE: The authors have indicated they have no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose.
Dmitry Dukhovny, DeWayne M. Pursley, Haresh M. Kirpalani, Jeffrey H. Horbar, John A. F. Zupancic; Evidence, Quality, and Waste: Solving the Value Equation in Neonatology. Pediatrics March 2016; 137 (3): e20150312. 10.1542/peds.2015-0312
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