Volume 49 | Number 4 | August 2014

Abstract List

Jostein Grytten Ph.D., Lars Monkerud Ph.D., Irene Skau Cand.polit, Rune Sørensen Ph.D.


Objective

To study whether neonatal and infant mortality, after adjustments for differences in case mix, were independent of the type of hospital in which the delivery was carried out.


Data

The Medical Birth Registry of orway provided detailed medical information for all births in orway.


Study Design

Hospitals were classified into two groups: local hospitals/maternity clinics versus central/regional hospitals. Outcomes were neonatal and infant mortality. The data were analyzed using propensity score weighting to make adjustments for differences in case mix between the two groups of hospitals. This analysis was supplemented with analyses of 13 local hospitals that were closed. Using a difference‐in‐difference approach, the effects that these closures had on neonatal and infant mortality were estimated.


Principal Finding

Neonatal and infant mortality were not affected by the type of hospital where the delivery took place.


Conclusion

A regionalized maternity service does not lead to increased neonatal and infant mortality. This is mainly because high‐risk deliveries were identified well in advance of the birth, and referred to a larger hospital with sufficient perinatal resources to deal with these deliveries.