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    BMJ. 2001 May 12;322(7295):1148-52.

    Vitamin K policies and midwifery practice: questionnaire survey.

    Source

    Leukaemia Research Fund Centre, Institute of Epidemiology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9LN. p.e.ansell@leeds.ac.uk

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES:

    To investigate policies on neonatal vitamin K and their implementation.

    DESIGN:

    Two phase postal survey.

    SETTING:

    United Kingdom.

    PARTICIPANTS:

    A 10% random sample of midwives registered with the United Kingdom Central Council for nursing, midwifery, and health visiting. Of 3191 midwives in the sample, 2515 (79%) responded to phase one and 2294 (72%) completed questionnaires on their current jobs (November 1998 to May 1999). In phase two, 853 (62%) of 1383 eligible midwives gave details on 2179 of their earliest jobs (start dates before 1990).

    RESULTS:

    All the midwives in clinical practice at the time of the survey (2271, 99%) reported that they were working in areas with official policies on neonatal vitamin K. Seven distinct policies were described: intramuscular vitamin K for all babies (1159, 51.0%); intramuscular vitamin K for babies at "high risk," oral for others (470, 20.7%); oral vitamin K for all babies (323, 14.2%); parental choice for all (124, 5.5%); parental choice for all except babies at high risk, (119, 5.2%); intramuscular vitamin K for babies at high risk only (33, 1.5%); oral vitamin K for babies at high risk only (17, 0.7%); and a disparate group of policies including intravenous vitamin K for some babies (26, 1.1%). Previous policies were (and some may still be) open to individual interpretation and were not always followed.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Hospital policy is not necessarily a good guide to individual practice. The primary purpose of clinical records is to document patient care, and recording practices reflect this. There is considerable variation in vitamin K policies and midwifery practice in the United Kingdom, and there is no clear consensus on which babies should receive vitamin K intramuscularly.

    PMID:
    11348908
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC31591
    Free PMC Article

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