Houston Chronicle Sunday

Eliminatin­g hospital newborn nurseries sparks debate

- Caroline Catherman

ORLANDO, Fla. — HCA Florida Osceola Hospital’s decision to eliminate its nursery — which prompted dozens of nurses, who argue the change will create unsafe conditions for newborns, to stage a protest last week — is part of a growing trend around the country.

In recent decades, it’s become standard to leave healthy newborns in rooms with their mothers as much as possible — a practice called rooming-in. It’s also referred to as the mother-baby model because one nurse typically cares for both of them. HCA Osceola has embraced this model.

There’s disagreeme­nt about whether removing the nursery unit is necessary and whether the same standard of care can be provided without it, however.

“Rooming-in has been around for many years. But you always had that one person that was an expert in her field that you could count on that was watching the babies that were out on the floor,” said Nancy Duckworth, who worked as a nurse for decades before becoming an associate instructor at the University of Central Florida College of Nursing.

Keeping mothers and babies together can improve the well-being of both and encourage breastfeed­ing, research suggests. Breastfeed­ing is linked to a lower risk of asthma, Type 1 diabetes and sudden infant death syndrome, also known as SIDs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Organizati­ons such as the Associatio­n of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses and the World Health Organizati­on endorse the motherbaby model used by HCA.

“HCA Florida Osceola Hospital has a decreased need for nursery services because healthy term babies are typically cared for in the room with their mothers and our preterm or vulnerable babies are cared for by our specialize­d team in the NICU,” HCA Florida Osceola Hospital Chief Nursing Officer Michelle Farris said in a statement to the Orlando Sentinel.

This mother-baby method does not require hospitals to get rid of nurseries, however, and AWHONN advises nurses to “be flexible” in allowing mothers breaks.

Three HCA Osceola nurses told the Orlando Sentinel they believe that nursery unit nurses are crucial. They argue nursery nurses have more experience than other nurses at certain tasks, such as performing a standard newborn assessment, in which babies are checked for potential problems with breathing, skin color or other warning signs.

“When you do something over and over and over again, you get good at what you do,” said HCA Osceola nursery unit nurse Virginia “Ginnie” England.

Staffing shortages

HCA spokespers­on Trip Farmer said through the mother-baby model that HCA Healthcare employs, other nurses do have the requisite experience already and can handle all the responsibi­lities that were historical­ly given to nursery nurses.

Cassandra Concas, a labor and delivery nurse at the Osceola hospital, is concerned in part because she has previous experience at a different hospital that lacked a traditiona­l nursery unit.

The battery of newborn assessment­s babies need was still getting done, but not as well, she said.

“Babies were being born and they weren’t being admitted properly. We didn’t have measuremen­ts done; the pediatrici­ans would get upset,” Concas said. “Things were being missed. Babies that should have been getting blood sugar checks because they were too small or too big weren’t getting them and it became a very, very big problem.”

Short-staffing — prevalent across the nation — compounds these concerns, said Marissa Lee, vice president of the National Nurses United union and a nurse at HCA Florida Osceola Hospital.

HCA contends highqualit­y care will continue to be provided without a nursery.

Expertise argument

In addition to motherbaby nurses and NICU nurses, HCA Osceola has a group of experts who are available to assist with newborn assessment­s 24/7, including neonatolog­ists, neonatal nurse practition­ers, and board-certified OB/GYNs, Farmer said.

“Newborn assessment­s and care are of the utmost importance,” Farmer said. “That is why we have multiple experts onsite to assist from when the mother checks in to when the mother and baby leave from our hospital.”

Another common concern surroundin­g rooming-in is whether it puts an undue burden on mothers.

“Rooming in has gone on for a number of years, but the mother always had the option to say, ‘I need to sleep,’ ” Duckworth said. “Once they go home, they don’t have the option to say, ‘I need my baby to go to a newborn nursery.’ ”

A 2017 study published in the Journal of Perinatal Education found 60 percent of surveyed postpartum mothers had a positive experience rooming-in.

If a mother wants a break from her baby for any reason, the baby can be admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit at nursery status and cared for there, Farmer said.

“There are no restrictio­ns on when a healthy baby can be cared for in the NICU. A mom may request this at any time, for any reason,” Farmer said in an email.

The hospital is hiring more neonatal intensive care unit nurses to make up for the lost positions, and nursery nurses have the option to train to work in the NICU or other department­s, Farmer said.

Nursery nurses have already begun training alongside NICU nurses in anticipati­on of the Dec. 12 transition.

 ?? Willie J. Allen Jr./Tribune News Service ?? Registered nurses at HCA Florida Osceola Hospital in Kissimmee, Fla., protest management’s decision to reduce services to mothers, babies and families.
Willie J. Allen Jr./Tribune News Service Registered nurses at HCA Florida Osceola Hospital in Kissimmee, Fla., protest management’s decision to reduce services to mothers, babies and families.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States