Abstract

OBJECTIVE:The goal of the present study was to examine the decisions of pediatricians who teach neonatal resuscitation in Brazil, particularly those who start resuscitation in the delivery room for newborns born at 23-26 gestational weeks.METHODS:The present study was a cross-sectional study that used electronic questionnaires (Dec/11-Sep/13) sent to instructors of the Neonatal Resuscitation Program of the Brazilian Society of Pediatrics. The primary outcome was the gestational age at which the respondent said that he/she would initiate positive pressure ventilation in the delivery room. Latent class analysis was used to identify the major profiles of these instructors, and logistic regression was used to identify variables associated with belonging to one of the derived classes.RESULTS:Of 685 instructors, 82% agreed to participate. Two latent classes were identified: ‘pro-resuscitation' (instructors with a high probability of performing ventilation on infants born at 23-26 weeks) and ‘pro-limitation' (instructors with a high probability of starting ventilation only for infants born at 25-26 weeks). In the multivariate model, compared with the ‘pro-limitation' class, ‘pro-resuscitation' pediatricians were more likely to be board-certified neonatologists and less likely to base their decision on the probability of the infant's death or on moral/religious considerations.CONCLUSION:The pediatricians in the most aggressive group were more likely to be specialists in neonatology and to use less subjective criteria to make delivery room decisions.

Highlights

  • The ethical dilemmas associated with neonatal resuscitation in the delivery room are evident in clinical practice

  • The survey respondents in the ‘pro-resuscitation’ class demonstrated a high probability of performing ventilation at all gestational ages

  • Its use to determine the profiles of physicians with different medical attitudes regarding ethical dilemmas related to neonatal resuscitation in the delivery room is original

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Summary

Introduction

The ethical dilemmas associated with neonatal resuscitation in the delivery room are evident in clinical practice. These situations occur when health professionals and/or parents are faced with a choice between two or more conflicting courses of action without clear evidence to support either as the best choice. Dealing with uncertainties and conflicts of various possible courses of action is one of the greatest challenges of neonatal care [1]. Infants with a gestational age of o23 weeks should not be resuscitated due to their limited viability [2]

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