Difference between revisions of "Improve Identification and Data Collection for NAS"

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=Introductory Paragraph=
=Introductory Paragraph=
One of the biggest challenges of addressing NAS is that it is not consistently identified, and collection of data and reporting is inconsistent.
One of the biggest challenges of addressing Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) is that it is not consistently identified, and collection of data and reporting is inconsistent. Standardized data collection and surveillance in all states and territories would improve the ability to guide public health strategies and interventions.


= Key Information =
= Key Information =


The Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) <ref>https://www.astho.org/</ref> has published guidance for standards for health agencies to improve current NAS surveillance. The document titled, ''Strengthening Health Agencies' Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance through Consensus Data and Standards,'' includes the following key components for agencies to improve NAS data collection and surveillance: <ref>https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf</ref> 
*Understand the landscape of NAS surveillance capacity.
*Enhance utility of Medicaid protocols
*Build a registry for NAS.
*Achieve consensus


'''Understand the Landscape.''' This involves documentation of how state and territory health agencies currently collect NAS data and conduct surveillance. This first step advanced in the ASTHO report is foundational to the identification of gaps in standards. Nationally standardized definitions of data and standardized diagnosis codes will improve collaboration and NAS reporting and interventions. In 2019, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) proposed a nationally standardized case definition to capture surveillance measures across jurisdictions to inform clinical and public health treatment and prevention efforts. Some of the states surveyed in the ASTHO report are using these standards while other states are using ICD-9 (779.5) and ICD-10 (P96.1) codes.


The Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO)<ref>https://www.astho.org/</ref> published: ''Strengthening Health Agencies' Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance through consensus data & Standards'' in September of 2021.  The standards include consideration for health agencies to improve current NAS surveillance.<ref>https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf</ref>
'''Enhance Utility of Medicaid Protocols.''' This involves expanding Medicaid’s capacity to use NAS data. It also involves improvement of data sharing between public health agencies and Medicaid.  


Included in the ASTHO key considerations:
'''Build a Registry for NAS.''' This will promote collaboration in collecting data and provide standard information across the country. Steps to build a registry include: <ref>https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf</ref>
includes key considerations for health agencies that wish to improve NAS data collection and
*Identify the purpose.
surveillance through the development of a registry. These considerations are further described with
*Determine if a registry is an appropriate means to achieve the purpose.
consideration for health agencies’ current capacity to collect data elements, leverage activities in the field
*Identify key stakeholders and how they have used or interacted with registries for other conditions.
that strengthen NAS surveillance, and apply a common case definition.
*Assess feasibility.
1. Build a registry for NAS.
*Build a registry team.
2. Understand the landscape of NAS surveillance capacity.
*Establish a governance and oversight plan.
3. Achieve consensus through a data element submission tool process to inform standards around
*Consider the scope and rigor needed.
NAS data elements and case definitions.
*Define the core data set, patient outcomes, and target population (data element submission process).
Improve data sharing between public health and Medicaid agencies with a goal of expanding their
*Develop a study plan or protocol.
capacity to use NAS data.
*Develop a project plan.
BUILD A REGISTRY FOR NAS
 
While there are immense variations in the scope, size, and resources required to build registries, this
'''Achieve Consensus.''' A tool for data element submission will advance the process of informing the development of national standards.
method of data collection and exchange between partners represents one avenue for collecting standard
information across the country. Registries maintain flexibility in the amount of data collected, operation
duration, resources required to maintain operation, and target populations, which can be expanded based
on new information or research.1
Steps to build a registry include:
1. Identify a purpose.
2. Determine if a registry is an appropriate means to achieve the purpose.
3. Identify key stakeholders and how they have used or interacted with
registries for other conditions.
4. Assess feasibility.
5. Build a registry team.
6. Establish a governance and oversight plan.
7. Consider the scope and rigor needed.
8. Define the core data set, patient outcomes, and target population
(data element submission process).
9. Develop a study plan or protocol.
10. Develop a project plan.
UNDERSTAND THE LANDSCAPE OF NAS SURVEILLANCE CAPACITY
ASTHO conducted an environmental scan from fall 2020 to spring 2021 to better understand how state and
territorial health agencies conduct NAS surveillance and what gaps remain related to capacity, feasibility,
and data standards. Information was sourced from literature and guidance documents prepared by
several national organizations and associations. ASTHO also conducted focus groups in March 2021 to
understand what states were referencing for NAS case definitions and data elements.
While Table 1 does not capture the full range of data elements a state or territorial health agency collects, it
does represent the data elements most commonly found in the literature and/or used by these agencies.
The definitions referenced include both informally and formally published definition, where one was
documented. This table provides a starting point for creating a core or minimum data set. Unique data
elements not included in this table will make up a larger NAS compendium and be discussed for relevance
Strengthening Health Agencies’ Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance 3
and utility during the consensus-driven approach that comprises the data element submission tool
process.


= Relevant Research =
= Relevant Research =


'''Positive Predictive Value of Administrative Data for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome'''<ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6317565/</ref>
* This report by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists summarizes an environmental scan that was performed on NAS data sources, methods, surveillance and reporting. <ref>https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.cste.org/resource/resmgr/pdfs/pdfs2/NAS_Environmental_Scan_Repor.pdf</ref>
 
* This article documents a study in which the predictive value of an algorithm was used to identify cases of NAS using administrative Medicaid claims data. <ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6317565/</ref>
 
* This article summarizes a study which was performed using publicly available information regarding NAS surveillance activities and definitions. Since current clinical case definitions use different combinations of clinician-observed signs of withdrawal and evidence of perinatal substance exposure, there is discordance in diagnosis codes used in surveillance definitions. This summary provides an understanding of the different clinical case and surveillance definitions which are used across the United States. <ref> Standardization of State Definitions for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance and the Opioid Crisis, retrieved at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6687235/</ref>


= Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies =
= Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies =


=== Indiana State Department of Health ===
'''Protecting Our Infants Act of 2015 (POIA)''' addresses problems related to prenatal opioid exposure. It called for HHS to review planning and coordination of HHS activities related to prenatal opioid exposure and NAS and to study and develop recommendations for the prevention, identification, and treatment of NAS as well as the treatment of opioid use disorder in pregnant women. <ref>https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/status-report-protecting-our-infants-act-implementation-plan-0#:~:text=IMPLEMENTATION%20STATUS%20OVERVIEW%20%20%20%20Recommendation%20Category,%20%20100%25%20%201%20more%20rows%20</ref>
<div class="_">In 2014, because of the high rate of opioid prescriptions, the Indiana General Assembly charged the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) to: develop a standard clinical definition of NAS and a standardized process of identifying it, identify the resources hospitals need to do this, and then establish a voluntary pilot program with hospitals to implement this standardized NAS identification. As of 2016, 26 of 89 Indiana Birthing Hospitals are taking part in this pilot screening program . ISDH noted that universal screening in a [[Shift_from_Punishment_to_Treatment_Approach_for_Opioid_Users|non-punitive]] environment would allow us to understand the true prevalence of Perinatal Substance Use and NAS.<sup class="reference">[1]</sup></div> <div class="_">&nbsp;</div> <div class="_">The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) established a Task Force which defined a '''standard clinical definition of Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome'''</div>
 
*The infant must:
'''The 2022 National Drug Control Strategy''' calls for developing a data plan and a consolidated database. One major source of administrative data within the data strategy includes the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) on records of emergency department admissions and inpatient hospital stays from participating states compiled by the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research (AHRQ). It provide data on drug overdoses and NAS. <ref>https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/National-Drug-Control-2022Strategy.pdf</ref>
*Be symptomatic  
 
*Have two or three consecutive modified Finnegan scores equal to or greater than a total of 24  
'''Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH).''' In response to the high rate of opioid prescriptions, the Indiana General Assembly charged ISDH to: develop a standard clinical definition of NAS and a standardized process of identifying it, identify the resources hospitals need to do this, and then establish a voluntary pilot program with hospitals to implement this standardized NAS identification. In 2016, 26 of 89 Indiana Birthing Hospitals took part in this pilot screening program. ISDH noted that universal screening in a non-punitive environment would allow us to understand the true prevalence of perinatal substance use and NAS. ISDH established a task force which provided a standard clinical definition of NAS, stating that the infant must be symptomatic, have two or three consecutive modified Finnegan scores equal to or greater than a total of 24, and either a positive toxicology test OR a maternal history with a positive verbal screen or toxicology test. <ref>https://www.in.gov/children/files/cisc-2015-0218-Infant-NAS-_Final-_Report.pdf</ref>
*And have one of the following:
 
**A positive toxicology test '''OR'''
**A maternal history with a positive verbal screen or toxicology test  
ISDH NAS Task Force Final Report: <div class="objectEmbed">[[File/view/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf/617730023/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf|[File:http://www.wikispaces.com/i/mime/32/application/pdf.png Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf]]] <div>[[File/view/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf/617730023/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf|Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf]]
*[[File/detail/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf|Details]]
*[[File/view/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf/617730023/Neonatal_Abstinence_Syndrome_Report_Final_Report.pdf|Download]]
*989 KB
</div> </div> NAS Identification Algorithm <div class="objectEmbed">[[File/view/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf/617730057/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf|[File:http://www.wikispaces.com/i/mime/32/application/pdf.png IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf]]] <div>[[File/view/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf/617730057/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf|IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf]]
*[[File/detail/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf|Details]]
*[[File/view/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf/617730057/IPQIC_NAS_Algorithm_Version_4.pdf|Download]]
*63 KB
</div> </div> '''''See [[ZOOM_MAP_-_Expand_Steps_to_Minimize_Opioid_Use_During_Pregnancy_or_Pregnancy_during_Opioid_Use|Adopt Universal Screening for Pregnant Women]] for more information on standardized screening and testing for NAS'''''
=Available Tools and Resources=
=Available Tools and Resources=


'''Strengthening Health Agencies Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance Through Consensus vs. Driven Data Standards and Practices'''<ref>https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf</ref>The standards includes key considerations for health agencies that wish to improve NAS data collection and surveillance through the development of a registry.
'''SAFE Project:'''
*See the wiki titled "Improve Data Sharing, Analysis, and Monitoring" for more detailed information on the improvement of data collection/analysis to fight the substance use crisis.<ref>https://www.yoursafesolutions.us/wiki/Improve_Data_Sharing,_Analysis,_and_Monitoring/</ref>
 
'''The World Health Organization''' has published "Guidelines for the Identification and Management of Substance Use and Substance Use Disorders in Pregnancy." It includes methods of data collection and analysis.  <ref>http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/107130/9789241548731_eng.pdf;jsessionid=55AE69AD37E7</ref>
 
'''The Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS)''' published "Data-Sharing Considerations for State Public Health Departments and Medicaid Agencies." This is a useful technical assistance brief that offers considerations, tips, and best practices to facilitate data sharing to support Medicaid-public health partnerships. It provides examples of jurisdictions that have set up effective data-sharing arrangements. <ref>http://www.618resources.chcs.org/wp-content/uploads/618-Data-Sharing-Resource-12.2.20.pdf</ref>
 
'''EMI Advisors''' provides a dashboard for NAS which includes a data element tool (DET). <ref>https://www.emiadvisors.net/nas-det-dashboard</ref>
 
'''Registries for Evaluating Patient Outcomes: A User's Guide.''' While not specific to NAS, this guide is useful to support the design, implementation, analysis, interpretation, and quality evaluation of registries created to increase understanding of patient outcomes. <ref>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK208616/</ref>


=Promising Practices=
=Promising Practices=


'''NAS Initiative: Key drivers of change'''<ref>https://health.usf.edu/-/media/Files/Public-Health/Chiles-Center/FPQC/MORE-Webinar-DataCollection-Dec2019.ashx?la=en&hash=99CA53B2C91E9D8425A4908FE96B7CA02C2D9D2A</ref>
'''The Florida Perinatal Quality Collaborative.''' The Maternal Opioid Recovery Effort (MORE) implemented an initiative on NAS that reflects a successful data collection process and key drivers of change. <ref>https://health.usf.edu/-/media/Files/Public-Health/Chiles-Center/FPQC/MORE-Webinar-DataCollection-Dec2019.ashx?la=en&hash=99CA53B2C91E9D8425A4908FE96B7CA02C2D9D2A</ref>
 
'''Kentucky''' established the Public Health Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Reporting Registry. Their work documents prevention strategies and provides evidence of declining rates of NAS. <ref>https://chfs.ky.gov/agencies/dph/dmch/Documents/NASReport.pdf</ref>
 
'''Missouri Hospital Association.''' After the identification of a possible gap in the ability to accurately measure prevalence of NAS in Missouri, five  strategies were developed to improve data capture of NAS and related maternal substance abuse by practitioners, clinical documentation specialists, and medical coding specialists. <ref>https://www.mhanet.com/mhaimages/sqi/brief/issue%20brief_triple%20aim_NAS_0918.pdf</ref>


= <span style="background-color: #ffffff">Sources</span> =
= <span style="background-color: #ffffff">Sources</span> =
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#[http://www.amchp.org/programsandtopics/BestPractices/InnovationStation/ISDocs/Perinatal%20Substance%20Use.pdf [1]]
</div> 
[[Category:Pages with broken file links]]
[[Category:Pages with broken file links]]

Latest revision as of 11:55, 23 October 2024

Introductory Paragraph

One of the biggest challenges of addressing Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) is that it is not consistently identified, and collection of data and reporting is inconsistent. Standardized data collection and surveillance in all states and territories would improve the ability to guide public health strategies and interventions.

Key Information

The Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) [1] has published guidance for standards for health agencies to improve current NAS surveillance. The document titled, Strengthening Health Agencies' Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance through Consensus Data and Standards, includes the following key components for agencies to improve NAS data collection and surveillance: [2]

  • Understand the landscape of NAS surveillance capacity.
  • Enhance utility of Medicaid protocols
  • Build a registry for NAS.
  • Achieve consensus

Understand the Landscape. This involves documentation of how state and territory health agencies currently collect NAS data and conduct surveillance. This first step advanced in the ASTHO report is foundational to the identification of gaps in standards. Nationally standardized definitions of data and standardized diagnosis codes will improve collaboration and NAS reporting and interventions. In 2019, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) proposed a nationally standardized case definition to capture surveillance measures across jurisdictions to inform clinical and public health treatment and prevention efforts. Some of the states surveyed in the ASTHO report are using these standards while other states are using ICD-9 (779.5) and ICD-10 (P96.1) codes.

Enhance Utility of Medicaid Protocols. This involves expanding Medicaid’s capacity to use NAS data. It also involves improvement of data sharing between public health agencies and Medicaid.

Build a Registry for NAS. This will promote collaboration in collecting data and provide standard information across the country. Steps to build a registry include: [3]

  • Identify the purpose.
  • Determine if a registry is an appropriate means to achieve the purpose.
  • Identify key stakeholders and how they have used or interacted with registries for other conditions.
  • Assess feasibility.
  • Build a registry team.
  • Establish a governance and oversight plan.
  • Consider the scope and rigor needed.
  • Define the core data set, patient outcomes, and target population (data element submission process).
  • Develop a study plan or protocol.
  • Develop a project plan.

Achieve Consensus. A tool for data element submission will advance the process of informing the development of national standards.

Relevant Research

  • This report by the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists summarizes an environmental scan that was performed on NAS data sources, methods, surveillance and reporting. [4]
  • This article documents a study in which the predictive value of an algorithm was used to identify cases of NAS using administrative Medicaid claims data. [5]
  • This article summarizes a study which was performed using publicly available information regarding NAS surveillance activities and definitions. Since current clinical case definitions use different combinations of clinician-observed signs of withdrawal and evidence of perinatal substance exposure, there is discordance in diagnosis codes used in surveillance definitions. This summary provides an understanding of the different clinical case and surveillance definitions which are used across the United States. [6]

Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies

Protecting Our Infants Act of 2015 (POIA) addresses problems related to prenatal opioid exposure. It called for HHS to review planning and coordination of HHS activities related to prenatal opioid exposure and NAS and to study and develop recommendations for the prevention, identification, and treatment of NAS as well as the treatment of opioid use disorder in pregnant women. [7]

The 2022 National Drug Control Strategy calls for developing a data plan and a consolidated database. One major source of administrative data within the data strategy includes the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) on records of emergency department admissions and inpatient hospital stays from participating states compiled by the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research (AHRQ). It provide data on drug overdoses and NAS. [8]

Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH). In response to the high rate of opioid prescriptions, the Indiana General Assembly charged ISDH to: develop a standard clinical definition of NAS and a standardized process of identifying it, identify the resources hospitals need to do this, and then establish a voluntary pilot program with hospitals to implement this standardized NAS identification. In 2016, 26 of 89 Indiana Birthing Hospitals took part in this pilot screening program. ISDH noted that universal screening in a non-punitive environment would allow us to understand the true prevalence of perinatal substance use and NAS. ISDH established a task force which provided a standard clinical definition of NAS, stating that the infant must be symptomatic, have two or three consecutive modified Finnegan scores equal to or greater than a total of 24, and either a positive toxicology test OR a maternal history with a positive verbal screen or toxicology test. [9]

Available Tools and Resources

SAFE Project:

  • See the wiki titled "Improve Data Sharing, Analysis, and Monitoring" for more detailed information on the improvement of data collection/analysis to fight the substance use crisis.[10]

The World Health Organization has published "Guidelines for the Identification and Management of Substance Use and Substance Use Disorders in Pregnancy." It includes methods of data collection and analysis. [11]

The Center for Health Care Strategies (CHCS) published "Data-Sharing Considerations for State Public Health Departments and Medicaid Agencies." This is a useful technical assistance brief that offers considerations, tips, and best practices to facilitate data sharing to support Medicaid-public health partnerships. It provides examples of jurisdictions that have set up effective data-sharing arrangements. [12]

EMI Advisors provides a dashboard for NAS which includes a data element tool (DET). [13]

Registries for Evaluating Patient Outcomes: A User's Guide. While not specific to NAS, this guide is useful to support the design, implementation, analysis, interpretation, and quality evaluation of registries created to increase understanding of patient outcomes. [14]

Promising Practices

The Florida Perinatal Quality Collaborative. The Maternal Opioid Recovery Effort (MORE) implemented an initiative on NAS that reflects a successful data collection process and key drivers of change. [15]

Kentucky established the Public Health Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Reporting Registry. Their work documents prevention strategies and provides evidence of declining rates of NAS. [16]

Missouri Hospital Association. After the identification of a possible gap in the ability to accurately measure prevalence of NAS in Missouri, five strategies were developed to improve data capture of NAS and related maternal substance abuse by practitioners, clinical documentation specialists, and medical coding specialists. [17]

Sources


  1. https://www.astho.org/
  2. https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf
  3. https://www.astho.org/globalassets/pdf/strengthening-health-agencies-nas-surveillance-through-consensus-driven-data-standards-practices.pdf
  4. https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.cste.org/resource/resmgr/pdfs/pdfs2/NAS_Environmental_Scan_Repor.pdf
  5. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6317565/
  6. Standardization of State Definitions for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance and the Opioid Crisis, retrieved at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6687235/
  7. https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/status-report-protecting-our-infants-act-implementation-plan-0#:~:text=IMPLEMENTATION%20STATUS%20OVERVIEW%20%20%20%20Recommendation%20Category,%20%20100%25%20%201%20more%20rows%20
  8. https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/National-Drug-Control-2022Strategy.pdf
  9. https://www.in.gov/children/files/cisc-2015-0218-Infant-NAS-_Final-_Report.pdf
  10. https://www.yoursafesolutions.us/wiki/Improve_Data_Sharing,_Analysis,_and_Monitoring/
  11. http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/107130/9789241548731_eng.pdf;jsessionid=55AE69AD37E7
  12. http://www.618resources.chcs.org/wp-content/uploads/618-Data-Sharing-Resource-12.2.20.pdf
  13. https://www.emiadvisors.net/nas-det-dashboard
  14. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK208616/
  15. https://health.usf.edu/-/media/Files/Public-Health/Chiles-Center/FPQC/MORE-Webinar-DataCollection-Dec2019.ashx?la=en&hash=99CA53B2C91E9D8425A4908FE96B7CA02C2D9D2A
  16. https://chfs.ky.gov/agencies/dph/dmch/Documents/NASReport.pdf
  17. https://www.mhanet.com/mhaimages/sqi/brief/issue%20brief_triple%20aim_NAS_0918.pdf