Fifty-one Indiana Hospitals Improving Quality of Lives for Mothers and Newborns

Indiana Hospitals are Making a Difference in Reducing Early Elective Delivery Rates

 
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. March of Dimes and the Indiana Hospital Association (IHA) are recognizing 51 of Indiana’s birthing hospitals on Sept. 5 for their work to reduce the number of elective inductions and cesarean deliveries performed before 39 completed weeks of pregnancy. This will give more babies a healthy start in life. 
According to numbers released from IHA and the Indiana State Department of Health earlier this year, Indiana hospitals have been successful in reducing early elective deliveries before 39 weeks to a rate of less than three percent, compared to 11 percent in 2012. That translates to about 429 early elective births that were avoided, thanks to the educational programs and new procedures at these hospitals, IHA officials said.
 
“The significant reduction in Indiana’s early elective delivery rate shows that hospitals have made tremendous strides in improving the quality of life for both mothers and their newborns.  Hospitals that have implemented a hard-stop policy have virtually eliminated early deliveries,” said Doug Leonard, president of the Indiana Hospital Association.
 
Worldwide, 15 million babies are born too soon each year and more than one million of those infants die as a result of their early births. Babies who survive an early birth often face the risk of lifelong health challenges, such as breathing problems, cerebral palsy, learning disabilities and others. Even babies born just a few weeks early have higher rates of hospitalization and illness than full-term infants. Recent research by the March of Dimes, the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration found that although the overall threat is small, the risk of death more than doubles for infants born at 37 weeks of pregnancy when compared to babies born at 40 weeks, for all races and ethnicities.
 

Through Strong Start, a partnership with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, March of Dimes has been communicating that “Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait.” 

The campaign urges women to wait for labor to begin on its own if their pregnancy is healthy, rather than scheduling delivery before 39 completed weeks of pregnancy.

“The last weeks of pregnancy are important. Babies aren’t just putting on weight. They are undergoing important development of the brain, lungs and other vital organs,” says Minjoo Morlan, associate director of program and public affairs for the March of Dimes. “I commend IHA and all these hospitals for being a champion for babies with their quality improvement effort.”
 
In Indiana, IHA and March of Dimes Indiana Chapter have partnered to improve the quality of birth outcomes statewide.
 

Hospitals Honored:

 
Adams Memorial Hospital
 
Bluffton Regional Medical Center
 
Cameron Memorial Community Hospital
 
Columbus Regional Hospital
  
Community Hospital Anderson
 
Community Hospital East
 
Community Hospital Munster 
Community Hospital North
 
Community Hospital of Bremen
 
Community Hospital South
 
Community Howard Regional Health
 
DeKalb Health
 
Dupont Hospital
 
Elkhart General Hospital
 
Fayette Regional Health System
 
Floyd Memorial Hospital & Health Services
 
Franciscan St. Anthony Health - Michigan City
 
Franciscan St. Anthony Health - Crown Point
 
Greene County General Hospital
 
Hancock Regional Hospital
 
Indiana University Health Bloomington Hospital
 
Indiana University Health Paoli Hospital
 
Indiana University Health West Hospital
 
Johnson Memorial Health
 
Logansport Memorial Hospital
 
Major Hospital
 
Methodist Hospital - Northlake Campus
 
Methodist Hospital - Southlake Campus
 
Parkview Health
 
Parkview Huntington Hospital
 
Parkview LaGrange Hospital
 
Parkview Noble Hospital
 
Parkview Regional Medical Center
 
Parkview Whitley Hospital
 
Perry County Memorial Hospital
 
Porter Regional Hospital
 
Saint Joseph Regional Medical Center - Mishawaka
 
Saint Joseph Regional Medical Center - Plymouth
 
Scott Memorial Hospital
 
Sidney & Lois Eskenazi Hospital
 
St. Joseph Hospital
 
St. Mary Medical Center
 
St. Vincent Anderson Regional Hospital
 
St. Vincent Carmel Hospital
 
St. Vincent Dunn Hospital
 
St. Vincent Fishers Hospital
 
St. Vincent Frankfort Hospital
 
St. Vincent Randolph Hospital
 
St. Vincent Women's Hospital
 
Terre Haute Regional Hospital
 
Union Hospital