Las Vegas Review-Journal

ROOMING-IN STR ATEGY HELPS MOTHER, BABY

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NEWBORNS, FROM PAGE 1:

these babies need is what has been taken away: a mother.

Separating newborns in withdrawal can slow the infants’ recovery, studies show, and undermine an already fragile parenting relationsh­ip. When mothers are close at hand, infants in withdrawal require less medication and fewer costly days in intensive care.

“Mom is a powerful treatment,” said Dr. Matthew Grossman, a pediatric hospitalis­t at Yale-new Haven Children’s Hospital who has studied the care of opioid-dependent babies.

Whisked away

Jay’la Cy’anne was born with a head of raven hair and a dependence on buprenorph­ine. Jamie Clay took the drug under the supervisio­n of Barton to help reduce her oxycodone cravings and keep her off illicit drugs.

“Dr. Barton saved my life, and he saved my baby’s life,” Clay said. She also used cocaine on occasion in the first trimester, she said, but quit with his encouragem­ent.

After a few days of observatio­n, Jay’la Cy’anne was transferre­d by ambulance from Baptist Health Richmond to the University of Kentucky Children’s Hospital, 25 miles away, for treatment.

Before being discharged, Clay was visited by an official from the state child-protective services office, who broke the unwelcome news that custody of the newborn would be given to her parents, the child’s grandparen­ts. (Officials declined to comment specifical­ly on the case.)

For months, Clay had stayed sober, expecting that she would be allowed to take her baby home. Standing in the hospital corridor, her dark hair up in a loose ponytail, she said, “I’m torn up in my heart.”

Generally, treatment for drug-dependent babies is expensive and can go on for months. Nationally, hospitaliz­ation costs rose to $1.5 billion in 2012, from $732 million in 2009, according to researcher­s at Vanderbilt University.

These are largely low-income parents, and Medicaid covers an estimated 80 percent of the hospital charges.

Babies in serious withdrawal cannot eat, sleep or settle down. Their bodies can be unusually stiff: When they are picked up, their heads may not fall back. Sleep may be interrupte­d by fullbody “startles.”

Even feeding a baby in withdrawal can be challengin­g. “You give them a bottle, and they are frantic,” said Chandra Wells, a transport nurse based out of the University of Kentucky Children’s Hospital. “They can’t form a tight suck.”

The standard treatment is to drip tiny doses of morphine into the mouth with a syringe to make the newborn comfortabl­e enough to eat and sleep. Then, over two to 12 weeks, the infant is weaned off morphine.

But community hospitals in rural areas rarely have neonatal intensive care units in which staff can administer morphine. So, after a brief period of observatio­n, infants in withdrawal are transferre­d to more sophistica­ted facilities.

The transport team that delivers opioid-dependent babies to Kentucky Children’s Hospital is called the Kentucky Kids Crew. It is made up of two nurses in royal blue uniforms and an emergency medical technician, who drives an ambulance specially outfitted with an incubator.

The team picks up babies in severe withdrawal from 20 hospitals in rural towns across southern and eastern Kentucky. The squalling infants are at risk for seizures and hard to comfort.

By the time the team is on the scene, said Kelly Turner, a veteran transport nurse, beleaguere­d staff will meet it at the door and say, “We’re glad you’re here.”

The babies are taken to a multilevel pediatric hospital that has a Level 4 neonatal intensive care unit, the highest level of care. The unit has nine rooms of bassinets with swaddled babies hooked up to monitors that beep at all hours. The overhead lights are bright.

In 2015 and 2016, this unit was over capacity almost half the time. Nearly 60 babies in withdrawal had to be diverted to other hospitals, because there were infants with even more pressing needs, like life support or breathing assistance.

Ironically, a baby in withdrawal needs a quiet and dark environmen­t without too many stimuli.

“Why are we putting kids in the NICU — a loud, bright room where their parents can’t stay?” Grossman asked.

A different model

Increasing­ly, experts fear that babies are being removed from mothers they need so they can get morphine they do not. Now some researcher­s are urging hospitals to pursue a new strategy.

“The model of care that’s being touted now is really that the mother is the first line of treatment for the baby,” said Dr. Debra L. Bogen, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

The strategy is called “rooming-in.” In a recent experiment at Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-hitchcock in Lebanon, N.H., for example, mothers and opioid-dependent newborns stayed together in the hospital, but outside the bustling NICU.

Staff prepared mothers struggling with opioid addiction before delivery to be caregivers. After the birth, volunteer “cuddlers” stepped in when parents were unavailabl­e.

Rooming-in reduced the length of stay for morphine-treated infants to 12 days from nearly 17, and the average hospital costs per infant to $9,000 from roughly $20,000, according to a study published last year in the journal Pediatrics.

Rooming-in also may be better for mothers addicted to opioids, who “often have a history of trauma and loss,” helping them bond with babies from birth, Bogen said.

“Separation may impair her attachment to her baby, increase the guilt she feels about the impact her addiction has on her baby and diminish her perception of her own mothering capacity — all of which can increase her risk of relapse,” she said.

The new strategy is already producing results at Kentucky Children’s Hospital. Specialist­s at the hospital help with any feeding trouble and teach parents ways to comfort babies in withdrawal, such as massage, cuddling or, if possible, breast-feeding.

“When we keep babies and mothers together the entire time, we almost never have to treat” with drugs, said Dr. Lori A. Shook, a neonatolog­ist at the hospital.

Infants who do not need medication stay just four or five days, while babies who do stay 22 or 23 days, she added.

Soon, a unit with eight private rooms for babies with neonatal abstinence syndrome and their mothers will open. The infants will be kept out of intensive care and with their parents.

Those special rooms were up and running too late for the Clays. But Jamie Clay was proud that Jay’la Cy’anne’s treatment for withdrawal was shorter than that of her firstborn daughter, who was exposed to oxycodone.

Barton, Clay’s obstetrici­an, had hoped to slowly wean her from buprenorph­ine. But she stopped taking it after she lost custody, enduring weeks of withdrawal.

“It was so bad,” Clay said. “But if I wanted my daughter back, I had to get clean.”

Without buprenorph­ine, she believed, a judge would have no reason to deny custody of her children.

Clay now spends days caring for Jay’la Cy’anne, but at night she must leave her parents’ home under the state order.

“It bothers her,” said her mother, Tamara Clay, 52. “Most parents want to be with their children in the night.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY TY WRIGHT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Tamara and Jimmy Clay play with a granddaugh­ter, Jakiah Rayne Clay, on March 17 at the hospital where her day-old sister was going through opioid withdrawal, in Richmond, Ky.
PHOTOS BY TY WRIGHT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Tamara and Jimmy Clay play with a granddaugh­ter, Jakiah Rayne Clay, on March 17 at the hospital where her day-old sister was going through opioid withdrawal, in Richmond, Ky.
 ??  ?? Jamie Clay lays in bed March 17 after giving birth to a daughter, Jay’la Cy’anne, at Baptist Health, a hospital in Richmond, Ky. After a decade of oxycodone abuse, Clay had for the past six months been in a recovery program, taking another opioid that...
Jamie Clay lays in bed March 17 after giving birth to a daughter, Jay’la Cy’anne, at Baptist Health, a hospital in Richmond, Ky. After a decade of oxycodone abuse, Clay had for the past six months been in a recovery program, taking another opioid that...

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