A Quality Improvement Initiative to Increase Scoring Consistency and Accuracy of the Finnegan Tool: Challenges in Obtaining Reliable Assessments of Drug Withdrawal in Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-1-2018

Institution/Department

Pediatrics

Journal Title

Advances in neonatal care : official journal of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses

MeSH Headings

Analgesics, Opioid, Dimensional Measurement Accuracy, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Needs Assessment, Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome, Neonatal Nursing, Nursing Assessment, Nursing Care, Quality Improvement, Reproducibility of Results, Research Design, United States

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current practice for diagnosing neonatal abstinence syndrome and guiding pharmacological management of neonatal drug withdrawal is dependent on nursing assessments and repeated evaluation of clinical signs.

PURPOSE: This single-center quality improvement initiative was designed to improve accuracy and consistency of Finnegan scores among neonatal nurses.

METHODS: One-hundred seventy neonatal nurses participated in a single-session withdrawal-assessment program that incorporated education, scoring guidelines, and a restructured Finnegan scale. Nurses scored a standardized video-recorded infant presenting with opioid withdrawal before and after training.

RESULTS: Nearly twice as many nurses scored at target (Finnegan score of 8) posttraining (34.7%; mean error = 0.559, SD = 1.4) compared with pretraining (18.8%; mean error = 1.31, SD = 1.95; Wilcoxon, P < .001). Finnegan scores were significantly higher than the target score pretraining (mean = 9.31, SD = 1.95) compared with posttraining (mean = 8.56, SD = 1.40, Wilcoxon P < .001); follow-up assessments reverted to pretraining levels (mean = 9.16, SD = 1.8). Score dispersion was greater pretraining (variance 3.80) compared with posttraining (variance 1.96; Kendall's Coefficient, P < .001) largely due to score disparity among central nervous system symptomology.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Education, clinical guidelines, and a restructured scoring tool increased consistency and accuracy of infant withdrawal-assessments among neonatal nurses. However, more than 60% of nurses did not assess withdrawal to the target score immediately following the training period and improvements did not persist over time.

IMPLICATIONS FOR RESEARCH: This study highlights the need for more objective tools to quantify withdrawal severity given that assessments are the primary driver of pharmacological management in neonatal drug withdrawal.Video Abstract available at https://journals.lww.com/advancesinneonatalcare/Pages/videogallery.aspx.

ISSN

1536-0911

First Page

70

Last Page

78

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