The Interhospital Transfer Network for Very Low Birth Weight Infants in the United States
Munik Shrestha, Samuel V. Scarpino, Erika M. Edwards, Lucy T., Greenberg, Jeffrey D. Horbar

TL;DR
This study analyzes the U.S. interhospital transfer network for very low birth weight infants, revealing regional community structures and introducing a new regionalization index that correlates with transfer rates.
Contribution
It introduces a novel spectral measure for regionalization in neonatal transfer networks, providing insights beyond traditional network centrality metrics.
Findings
Transfers are organized around regional communities, often crossing state boundaries.
The regionalization index correlates with infant transfer rates.
Traditional network measures show weak correlation with transfer patterns.
Abstract
Very low birth weight (VLBW) infants require specialized care in neonatal intensive care units. In the United States (U.S.), such infants frequently are transferred between hospitals. Although these neonatal transfer networks are important, both economically and for infant morbidity and mortality, the national-level pattern of neonatal transfers is largely unknown. Using data from Vermont Oxford Network on 44,753 births, 2,122 hospitals, and 9,722 inter-hospital infant transfers from 2015, we performed the largest analysis to date on the inter-hospital transfer network for VLBW infants in the U.S. We find that transfers are organized around regional communities, but that despite being largely within state boundaries, most communities often contain at least two hospitals in different states. To classify the structural variation in transfer pattern amongst these communities, we applied a…
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