Training and Integration of Eat, Sleep, Console Model for Infants and Families at an Urban Academic Health Center
Sydney Conti, Jennifer Chin, Katherine Kemble, Bethany Rolfe Witham, Katelyn Yoder, Amber Pattison, Ying Zhang

TL;DR
This paper describes the training and implementation of the Eat, Sleep, Console (ESC) model for managing neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome in an urban academic health center.
Contribution
The study introduces a multidisciplinary training program for ESC, emphasizing nonpharmacologic care and parent-infant relationships.
Findings
Training improved self-rated preparedness to use nonpharmacologic interventions for NOWS.
Multidisciplinary education supported successful ESC implementation in clinical settings.
Pre- and posttraining surveys showed statistically significant improvements in clinician preparedness.
Abstract
Eat, Sleep, Console (ESC) is an effective approach for evaluating and managing neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS). The current standard, Finnegan Neonatal Abstinence Scoring System, requires waking neonates to assess NOWS and prioritizes pharmacotherapy treatment. However, ESC focuses on infants’ abilities to function and cope with opioid withdrawal, prioritizes nonpharmacologic interventions, and emphasizes the crucial role of the parent–infant relationship. We created and delivered ESC training for perinatal and neonatal staff and clinicians across an urban academic health center. We utilized the knowledge-to-action framework to guide project design and implementation. The training program consisted of 30- to 60-minute didactic sessions for neonatal and perinatal clinicians and staff on labor and delivery and neonatal intensive care units, an ESC algorithm for care, and pre-…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Feeding Issues · Infant Health and Development · Infant Development and Preterm Care
