Objectives: Excessive postneonatal mortality in West Virginia has been associated with inadequate health care. This paper describes two interventions aimed at those infants at greatest risk of dying.
Methods: Two systems of risk-related intervention were simultaneously introduced and funded statewide from 1985 through 1987. Risk status was determined by a multifactorial score at birth or clinical risk factors later. At-risk infants were linked with physicians who provided specified care plans. All infants were followed for 1 year for mortality.
Results: Of 4570 infants with a high Sheffield Birth Score, 45%, together with 1003 infants with clinical risk factors, received specified care plans. High-risk infants constituted 7.6% of total resident births. Odds ratios for overall postneonatal mortality and sudden infant death syndrome in high-birth-score infants compared with low-birth-score infants were 6.2 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 4.2, 9.3) and 11.2 (95% CI = 5.4, 23.2), respectively. The relative risks of postneonatal mortality were similarly significant for infants with most clinical risk factors. During the program there was a 21.4% reduction in the trend of yearly standardized mortality ratios, which differed markedly from the trend in surrounding states. The data suggest that 33 lives were saved at a cost of $36,363 per infant.
Conclusion: Ensuring affordable, available, accessible, and acceptable care for a small group of at-risk infants was associated with a dramatic drop in overall postneonatal mortality in West Virginia.