Abstract

Evaluate the effectiveness of a digital home monitoring program for infants with cleft palate with or without cleft lip (CP ± L), compared to monitoring through in-person clinic visits. Retrospective cohort study. One metropolitan pediatric hospital. Eight-eight infants with CP ± L: 41 infants received digital home monitoring and 47 infants were monitored solely through in-person visits. Beginning in September 2022, all infants with CP ± L were enrolled in a digital home monitoring program, in which caregivers weighed their child weekly at home and submitted those weights, along with subjective evaluations of their child's feeding, using a secure website. Submissions were monitored by the cleft team nurse coordinator. The primary outcome was the incidence of malnutrition at 4 months of age. The secondary outcome was the average number of in-person clinic visits during the first 4 months of life. There was not a significant difference (P = .764) in the incidence of malnutrition between infants monitored in-person compared to infants in the home monitoring program (13% vs 17%). Infants in the home monitoring program had fewer in-person visits with speech-language pathology (5.4 vs 3.9; P < .001). Across groups, malnutrition was associated with Child Protective Services involvement (P = .001) and presence of a syndrome (P = .014). The digital home monitoring program did not decrease the incidence of malnutrition, but it did reduce the number of speech-language pathology in-person visits. The program appears to distinguish infants who are gaining weight appropriately from those with feeding challenges, but it does not fully address the multifactorial contributors to malnutrition.

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