Skip to main content

Colorado Hospitals Substance

Exposed Newborns (CHoSEN)

About CHoSEN

CHoSEN is an initiative to increase consistency in implementation of best practice approaches in the identification of and response to newborns prenatally exposed to substances at the time of birth. Perinatal opioid use and neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) is a major public health concern in Colorado.

 In the context of an ongoing opioid epidemic, the incidence of birthing people, infants, and families impacted by opioid use during pregnancy continues to rise. Among hospitals caring for substance-exposed newborns (SENs) and their families in this state, significant variation in clinical and social interventions exists due to lack of robust scientific evidence for practices that optimize maternal and infant outcomes. 

Building upon the work done by states like Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Vermont, the CHoSEN Quality Improvement Collaborative seeks to improve the hospital care of SENs using multi-disciplinary hospital-based improvement teams working collaboratively to achieve measurable improvements. 

Hospital teams use structured quality improvement methods to improve their local practices, including setting specific aims, following appropriate outcome and process measures, and using plan-do-study-act cycles to test and implement changes. Teams collect data on key performance measures to assess progress and drive improvement. Collaboration through open sharing of practices and data is encouraged and supported by regularly publishing toolkits of best practices and resources, community webinars, and twice-yearly statewide forums. 

Learn more about how we’re partnering with the CHoSEN Collaborative to improve care for mothers and newborns impacted by perinatal substance use.

Why


Results

Program Partners

  • Led in partnership by University of Colorado School of Medicine, Illuminate Colorado, and CPCQC
  • Funded in part by the Colorado Department of Human Services

Related Insights

Recent data shows sobering statistics of increased rates of maternal mortality and persisting racial disparities nationwide. This data reminds us that we have so much more work to do to improve equity to access and care for moms, birthing people, and their babies across our country and in our state.
This fall, CPCQC gathered with partners across the state at the CHoSEN Forum. The semi-annual convening brought providers, organizations, and policymakers together to improve perinatal substance use outcomes.