Objective: Describe discrepancies between facilities' self-reported level of neonatal care and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Levels of Care Assessment ToolSM (CDC LOCATeSM)-assessed level.
Study design: CDC LOCATeSM data from 765 health facilities in the United States, including 17 states, one territory, one large multi-state hospital system, and one perinatal region within a state, was collected between 2016 and 2021 for this cross-sectional analysis.
Result: Among 721 facilities that self-reported level of neonatal care, 33.1% had discrepancies between their self-reported level and their LOCATeSM-assessed level. Among facilities with discrepancies, 75.3% self-reported a higher level of neonatal care than their LOCATeSM-assessed level. The most common elements contributing to discrepancies were limited specialty and subspecialty staffing, such as neonatology or neonatal surgery.
Conclusion: Results highlight opportunities for jurisdictions to engage with facilities, health systems, and partners about levels of neonatal care, and to collaborate to promote standardized systems of risk-appropriate care.
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