Quality improvement practitioners have traditionally used 3 types of measures or metrics to help track what type of change a quality improvement project produces.  The 3 traditional measure types are: process measure, outcome measure, and balancing measure.  An equity measure is a new type of measure that is designed to identify and address existing inequities and barriers to attaining health equity for all people, and should be utilized going forward for all quality improvement projects including implementation of this guideline.

Quality Improvement Metrics Defined

Quality Improvement Metrics

The following are examples of quality metrics that could be used by individual providers, health care systems, or multi-center quality improvement collaboratives to monitor adherence to the American Academy of Pediatrics Guideline for Faltering Weight. 

Equity Note: Each of the measures should be evaluated with an equity lens by stratifying the data by race, ethnicity, preferred language, sex, gender, and insurance type.  Additional stratifications can be done as indicated based on identified inequities. 

Measure Name

Type of Measure Definition Calculation

Example: Bili Discharge

Example: process, balancing, outcome; equity

Example: Routine bilirubin testing for newborns discharged before 24 hours

Example Numerator: At least one total serum bilirubin (TSB) or transcutaneous bilirubin (TcB) measure before discharge

Example Denominator: Newborns discharged at or before 24h after birth

Faltering Weight Evaluation (KAS 2)

Process

Patients evaluated for faltering weight should have an initial evaluation that includes: detailed medical history, family history, social history, feeding history, growth history, growth assessment and detailed physical exam

Numerator: Number of patients with all aspects of history and physical exam

Denominator: Total number of patients evaluated for faltering weight

Equity in Faltering Weight Evaluation (KAS 1)

Process
Equity

All patients undergoing evaluation for faltering weight should be evaluated with the same criteria regardless of race or socioeconomic status

Numerators:
1)    Number of white patients with all aspects of history and physical exam
2)    Number of Black patients with all aspects of history and physical exam
3)    Number of Hispanic patients with all aspects of history and physical exam
4)    Number of Asian/Pacific Islander patients with all aspects of history and physical exam
5)    Number of Native American patients with all aspects of history and physical exam

Denominator: Total number of (white, Black, Hispanic or Asian/Pacific Islander, Native American etc.) patients evaluated for faltering weight

Faltering Weight Diagnostic Testing (KAS 2)

Process

Patients undergoing initial evaluation for faltering weight did not undergo diagnostic testing

Numerator: Number of patients evaluated for faltering weight that had NO diagnostic tests performed

Denominator: Total number of patients evaluated for faltering weight

Faltering Weight Treatment (KAS 4)

Process

Increased calories should be the first treatment recommendation for all patients with faltering weight

Numerator: Number of patients who were given the recommendation to increase calories

Denominator: Total number of patients diagnosed with faltering weight

Faltering Weight Patient Growth (KAS 1 – 6)

Outcome

Patients with faltering weight who have been appropriately diagnosed and treated will no longer meet the criteria for faltering weight 6 months after initial diagnosis

Numerator: Number of patients diagnosed with faltering weight who no longer met the criteria after 6 months of treatment

Denominator: Total number of patients diagnosed with faltering weight

Feeding Therapy (KAS 6)

Outcome

Patients with documented feeding issues should be referred for feeding therapy

Numerator: Number of patients with feeding issues referred for feeding therapy

Denominator: Total number of patients with faltering weight who were identified as having feeding issues

Faltering Weight Diagnosis Delayed (KAS 1 - 6)

Balancing

Patients with faltering weight who had a delay in diagnosis

Numerator: Number of patients who were not diagnosed during the initial evaluation but were subsequently diagnosed with faltering weight

Denominator: Total number of patients diagnosed with faltering weight

Patients Needing Diagnostic Testing (KAS 2)

Balancing

Patients with faltering weight who did not meet the criteria for lab evaluation at the initial evaluation (based on algorithm), but who had lab tests performed on follow-up evaluation.

Numerator: Number of patients who had lab testing performed on any follow-up evaluation.

Denominator: Total number of patients evaluated for faltering weight


Acknowledgement

Nicole Anania, DO, MS, FAAP, served as the Implementation Scientist on the recently published American Academy of Pediatrics Faltering Weight Clinical Practice Guideline.  Most recently, she was a Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Kentucky and Medical Director for Inpatient Pediatrics at Med Center Health in Bowling Green, KY.  Prior to that, she served as a Master Clinician and Director of Quality Improvement for the Outreach Division of Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago and has extensive experience working with children with medical complexity and faltering weight.

Last Updated

03/11/2026

Source

American Academy of Pediatrics