BOSTON (AP) -- A study has found little difference in death rates of newborns
across the country, suggesting that most places are oversupplied with
specialists and intensive care beds for sickly babies.
``There does not seem to be a reason to further expand the supply'' of
specialized doctors and hospital beds for sick and premature newborns, according
to Dr. David Goodman, who supervised the study.
Only newborns in areas with the very fewest specialists die at a higher rate
than elsewhere. Once a certain threshold of care is reached, more doctors offer
no extra advantage, the study says.
The researchers said this oversupply is not just wasteful but may also be
harmful, subjecting babies to unnecessary tests and treatments.
The researchers ``raise disturbing issues regarding the nation's
unquestioning acceptance that more is always better with respect to the supply
of specialist physicians and hospital technology,'' said Dr. Kevin Grumbach, a
public health researcher at the University of California at San Francisco.
He wrote an editorial to accompany the findings, published in Thursday's
edition of The New England Journal of Medicine.
The researchers at Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, N.H., knew of big
disparities in the availability of specialized neonatal care from region to
region. They wondered if places with more specialized doctors or beds relative
to the number of births save more newborns.
The study found that, for the most part, they don't. Only newborns in areas
with very few such doctors, 2.7 for every 10,000 births, show a higher death
rate -- 7 percent higher than in other areas.
Elsewhere, areas with a supply of doctors ranging from 4.3 to 11.6
neonatologists per 10,000 births all had about the same death rate. Even the
most premature babies were found to die at roughly the same rate in these areas.
Moreover, the supply of neonatal intensive care hospital beds made no
difference in death rates around the country.
``Enough may be enough,'' said Goodman.
The neonatal-care specialty has mushroomed since the 1970s, thanks to new
technology and therapies, including ventilators designed for premature newborns
and prenatal drugs that help lungs develop. Some babies born three months early,
weighing barely over a pound, can now be rescued.
However, the researchers suggested that social and economic factors have
expanded the field beyond pure medical need. For doctors, the specialty can be
gratifying, exciting and well-paying. For hospitals, it a lucrative and
prestigious business.
The researchers said that because of the oversupply, some relatively healthy
newborns may undergo unneeded tests and treatments that can produce harmful side
effects.
``If I have a healthy full-term baby, I actually don't want anyone messing
around with that baby,'' Grumbach said. ``There's a downside where we meddle too
much.''
However, he said it would take deep changes in the medical system, with more
government planning, to distribute neonatal doctors and beds much more
uniformly.
An executive at a large for-profit neonatal doctors' group,
Pediatrix Medical Group of Sunrise, Fla.,
agreed that the distribution of these specialized doctors ``is not ideal.''
``There are areas where there are perhaps more than we need and areas where
there are perhaps less than we need,'' said Dr. Joyce Peabody, vice president of
medical affairs at Pediatrix.
However, she cautioned against drawing broad conclusions from the study,
since it considered only death rates. Many other factors, like a child's mental
and physical development, also reflect quality of care, she said.
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