By KAYLA KELLY
Each semester I’ve the privilege of guiding nursing college students by their maternal and pediatric clinicals. Firstly of the semester, their enthusiasm is contagious. They share tales about witnessing their first supply, serving to a brand new mom with breastfeeding, and practising developmental assessments on pediatric sufferers. Because the semester progresses, I see their demeanor shift. “You had been proper, we took care of one other congenital syphilis child at this time.” Their reflections on the scientific day are a combination of feelings: frustration, anger, and disappointment, as they watch fragile infants preventing an an infection that no youngster ought to ever should endure.
Once I first inform my nursing college students that they are going to seemingly look after infants born with syphilis throughout their scientific rotations, they take a look at me with wide-eyed disbelief. “Didn’t we treatment syphilis within the 1950’s?” some ask. Just a few of my college students normally recall listening to concerning the Tuskegee Examine, however most don’t know that we’re nonetheless preventing (and dropping) a battle in opposition to congenital syphilis in the US at this time.
Congenital syphilis happens when a mom transmits the an infection to her toddler throughout being pregnant or supply. It’s nearly completely preventable with well timed screening and therapy, but the variety of circumstances continues to rise at an alarming price. Between 2018 and 2022, the US skilled a 183% enhance in congenital syphilis circumstances, rising from 1,328 circumstances to three,769. This nationwide pattern was mirrored on the state degree, with Texas reporting 179 circumstances in 2017 and 922 in 2022. Throughout these 5 years, the speed of infants born with congenital syphilis in Texas rose from 46.9 to 236.6 per 100,000 stay births, a pointy enhance that necessitates motion.
Texas now has one of many highest congenital syphilis charges within the nation, regardless of having probably the most complete prenatal screening legal guidelines. In response to the Texas Division of State Well being Providerscoverage mandates syphilis screening at three factors throughout being pregnant:
(1) on the first prenatal go to
(2) the third trimester (however no sooner than 28 weeks)
(3) at supply
However herein lies the issue: What occurs when a girl by no means attends prenatal care? How will we attain those that by no means step into an OB/GYN workplace throughout being pregnant? Screening legal guidelines solely defend those that are in a position to entry care. In 2022, over 1/3 of Texas moms whose infants had been recognized with congenital syphilis didn’t obtain any prenatal care. Every of those circumstances represents a failure of our present medical system, a system that ought to be defending essentially the most weak but stays unable to succeed in those that want it most.
Socioeconomic and systemic limitations usually restrict healthcare entry for weak populations and communities. Congenital syphilis disproportionately impacts infants born to moms who expertise restricted healthcare entry, housing instability, poverty, maternal drug use, and insufficient prenatal care. Many ladies additionally keep away from or delay prenatal care on account of stigma, fears of judgment from healthcare suppliers, or considerations about being examined for substance abuse.
Think about if, as an alternative of relying solely on girls to attend prenatal appointments for screening, we may determine who’s most in danger for delivering an toddler with congenital syphilis the second they work together with any a part of the healthcare system. By leveraging present digital well being file (EHR) information and synthetic intelligence (AI), we may construct predictive fashions able to forecasting maternal and toddler well being outcomes.
These fashions may incorporate issues like prenatal care utilization, zip code, and different scientific information. Sufferers flagged as high-risk inside the EHR may mechanically set off a nurse navigator referral for additional evaluation and care coordination. Somewhat than limiting syphilis screening to obstetric visits, this strategy would determine high-risk sufferers at any level of contact: the emergency division, main care, behavioral well being, substance use therapy, or neighborhood outreach clinics.
Predictive fashions have already confirmed profitable in bettering different scientific outcomes equivalent to sepsis, diabetes, and even preterm start. We have already got the EHR methods and the information wanted. We simply should develop and apply the mannequin. These success tales reveal that with information analytics and AI, bettering congenital syphilis outcomes shouldn’t be solely attainable, however inside attain.
At present, each U.S. and Texas insurance policies deal with syphilis screening necessities throughout prenatal visits. However what concerning the girls who by no means attend conventional prenatal care? How will we defend their infants from congenital syphilis? We should critically consider our strategy and develop insurance policies that evolve with the realities of at this time’s healthcare system.
Many pregnant girls search care in emergency rooms or pressing care clinics for unrelated points equivalent to UTIs, fevers, or coughs. Every of those encounters represents a chance for healthcare suppliers to intervene and forestall the transmission of congenital syphilis. Insurance policies ought to be up to date to require screening at each healthcare encounter for pregnant girls who haven’t met present screening pointers, and to make sure follow-up for these recognized as high-risk inside 48 hours.
As soon as high-risk sufferers are recognized by predictive modeling, geomapping will help public well being professionals successfully goal outreach efforts. This device creates visible maps that may reveal clusters of infections and spotlight hotspots the place testing, training, and neighborhood sources ought to be targeted. This strategy is usually utilized by well being departments to allocate sources to the place they’re wanted most.
Funding to construct and combine predictive modeling into EHR methods may come from state and public well being grants. As soon as developed, the continued price of sustaining the mannequin could be minimal in comparison with the rising prices of congenital syphilis. The typical hospitalization price for an toddler born with congenital syphilis is roughly $56,802, which is almost 4 instances greater than an toddler with out congenital syphilis. Stopping even a small variety of circumstances would rapidly offset the price of the funding required to develop and implement this mannequin.
The drastic rise in congenital syphilis circumstances represents a failure of our well being system, a failure outlined by missed alternatives for prevention. Whereas AI can by no means substitute the human ingredient of compassionate caregiving, it may well present us with the information wanted to make an enduring impression inside weak populations and enhance maternal-infant well being outcomes.
Remaining stagnant below our present ineffective insurance policies borders on negligence. To have the accessible know-how and never use it’s, in some ways, a failure to rescue. However the marriage of know-how and compassion can change this story’s ending. I consider my college students’ faces, the frustration and disbelief of their eyes. I want I may inform them this would be the final time they see a child born with congenital syphilis, however until issues change, that is solely the start.
Kayla Kelly, MSN, RN, CPN is a nursing teacher and PhD scholar on the College of Texas at Tyler
