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Today’s webinar will begin in a few minutes.

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THA /TIPQC OB EED Webinar

August 28, 2017

A THA/TCPS TIPQC Collaborative Inter-institutional Quality Improvement Project

Welcome! Agenda for today:

• Birth Defect Reporting and Birth Defect Advisory Committee

• EED Data • Crib Cards • Breastfeeding Survey Reminder • Maternal and Neonatal Sepsis • Open Discussion and Team Sharing • Reminders and Upcoming Events

Tennessee Birth Defects Surveillance System (TNBDSS)

THA OB Webinar

Carolina Clark, MD, MPH | August 28, 2017

Objectives

• Introduce TN Birth Defects Surveillance System • Discuss our program goals • Discuss how to report neurologic birth defects

Tennessee Birth Defects Registry

• Established June 2000 (TCA 68-5‐506)

1. Annual report on birth defects prevalence and trends 2. Possible association of environmental hazards and other potential

causes of birth defects 3. Evaluate current birth defect prevention

initiatives 4. Provide families of children with birth

defects information on available public services

Tennessee Birth Defects Surveillance System

US Zika

Pregnancy Registry

Pregnant women with lab evidence

of possible Zika exposure and their

children

Zika-Related Birth Defects Surveillance

Infants with Zika-related birth defects

US Zika Pregnancy Registry

• Pregnant women – laboratory evidence of Zika virus infection – Both symptomatic AND asymptomatic

• Infants born to these women – Exposed periconceptionally, prenatally or perinatally

• All infants with laboratory evidence of Zika virus infection – Both symptomatic AND asymptomatic

• The mothers of these infants – Both symptomatic AND asymptomatic

Zika in Tennessee

• 66 travel-related cases in 2016 – 51 confirmed (0 pregnant women) – 15 probable (6 pregnant women) – Microcephaly: 0 Zika related

• 0 travel-related cases in 2017

Tennessee Birth Defects Surveillance System (TNBDSS)

• Recipient of CDC cooperative agreement (Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity – ELC) grant

• Expand capacity of neurologic birth defect monitoring • Investment in IT infrastructure, personnel, training/capacity

building Program Goals: • Enhance surveillance capacity • Ensure linkage to services • Evaluate health outcomes for children

CDC Enhanced Birth Defects Surveillance

• Rapid population-based surveillance for all infants born with birth defects potentially associated with Zika virus infection during pregnancy

• Partner Agencies – Children’s Special Services (CSS) – Tennessee Early Intervention System (TEIS) – Vanderbilt Consortium LEND (Leadership Education in

Neurodevelopmental Disabilities) – Office of Vital Records – TN Perinatal Centers

Case Numbers

• Neurologic birth defects: 194 cases as of 8/25 • US Zika Pregnancy Registry: 7 cases, 7 births with no currently confirmed

birth defects – 2 women were symptomatic, 5 were asymptomatic

Neurologic Birth Defects Reporting

• In February 2016, TDH mandated reporting of all new cases of microcephaly

• January 1, 2017 expanded surveillance to central nervous system (CNS) birth defects associated with congenital Zika virus infection – Brain abnormalities with and without microcephaly – Neural tube defects and other early brain malformations – Eye abnormalities – Consequences of central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction

Tennessee Birth Defects System (TNBDSS)

• Integrated into Newborn Screening and Children’s Special Services programs

• Referrals to services and family support agencies • Case management for 3 years or up to 5 years of age

– Clinical outcomes – Functional/developmental outcomes

Reporting of neurologic birth defects

is necessary to assure connection to care for these infants

How do healthcare providers participate?

1. Identify pregnant women with potential exposure to Zika virus and infants with suspected congenital exposure to Zika virus.

2. Report cases of Zika associated birth defects. 3. Collect pertinent clinical follow-up information about these pregnant

women and infants. 4. Quickly notify birth.defects@tn.gov of

adverse events, such as spontaneous abortion, fetal death, or birth defects.

State Law

• From Rule 1200-14-.26: • “No person shall interfere with or obstruct… the

examination of any relevant record, by the responsible health officer, his duly authorized agent or a representative of the department in the proper discharge of his or her official duties under these Rules.”

Federal Law

• PURSUANT TO 45 CFR § 164.512 (b) of the Privacy Rule, “covered entities such as hospitals may disclose, without individual authorization, protected health information to a public health authority that is authorized by law to collect or receiving such information for the purpose of preventing or controlling disease, injury, or disability, including, but not limited to, the reporting of disease, injury, vital events such as birth or death and the conduct of public health surveillance, public health investigations, and public health interventions…”

Online case reporting system

Click here: https://tdhrc.health.tn.gov/redcap/surveys/?s

=TDEYPYCHET

For more information

• Contact the TNBDSS team at birth.defects@tn.gov

• Carolina Clark, MD, MPH, Pediatric Consultant • Katherine Lolley, MPH, CPH, Program Director • Tori Ponson, MPH, CPH, Epidemiologist • Laura Price, RN, Nurse Case Manager

Supplemental Slides

TNBDS Reportable Birth Defects

Brain abnormalities with and without microcephaly – Confirmed or possible congenital microcephaly – Intracranial calcifications – Cerebral atrophy – Abnormal cortical formation

• e.g., polymicrogyria, lissencephaly, pachygyria, schizencephaly, gray matter heterotopia

– Corpus callosum abnormalities – Cerebellar abnormalities – Porencephaly – Hydranencephaly – Ventriculomegaly / hydrocephaly – Fetal brain disruption sequence (collapsed skull, overlapping sutures, prominent occipital

bone, scalp rugae) – Other major brain abnormalities, including intraventricular hemorrhage in utero (excluding

postnatal IVH)

TNBDS Reportable Birth Defects

Neural tube defects and other early brain malformations – Anencephaly / Acrania – Encephalocele – Spina bifida – Holoprosencephaly / Arhinencephaly

Eye abnormalities – Microphthalmia / Anophthalmia – Coloboma – Cataract – Intraocular calcifications – Chorioretinal anomalies involving the macula (e.g., chorioretinal atrophy and

scarring, macular pallor, gross pigmentary mottling and retinal hemorrhage); excluding retinopathy of prematurity

– Optic nerve atrophy, pallor, and other optic nerve abnormalities

TNBDSS Reportable Birth Defects

Consequences of central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction – Congenital contractures (e.g., arthrogryposis, club foot, congenital hip dysplasia)

ONLY with associated brain abnormalities – Congenital deafness documented by postnatal testing

• Reporting fields: – Infant information

• MR # • Name/sex/DOB • Gestational age • Pregnancy outcome (live birth, fetal death/stillbirth) • Diagnosis • Date of diagnosis • Provider

– Maternal information • Name/DOB/SSN • Address (County and State) • Travel history • Reporter information • Provider

Neurologic Birth Defect Monitoring

Questions?

OB EED Data Trends Working toward our goal of 5% or less

Crib Cards

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Contact Rachel Heitmann at rachel.heitmann@tn.gov

Breastfeeding Survey Reminder: Breastfeeding Survey Ongoing

We need your input

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/LQQ9ZKH

Upcoming Events

“Obstetric Care for Women with Opioid Use Disorder Patient Safety Bundle

Presentation” Wednesday, September 6, 2017

beginning at 12:30pm CT/1:30pm ET

Presenters:

Elizabeth Krans, MD, MSc and Miskha Terplan, MD, MPH

http://safehealthcareforeverywoman.org/registration/

https://wscspotlight.org/

Save the Date!!!

“Updates to the Joint Commission’s Perinatal Care Core Measures” Webinar

Susan Yendro of the Joint Commission, Presenting Monday, October 30th beginning at 10am CT

EED Data Due Date! Monthly data due by last date of following month!

Reminder! Our Next Monthly OB Webinar will be held on Monday September 25, 2017

at 10:00am CT/11:00am ET

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