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Preterm Admissions in LUTH: An Overview

Preterm Admissions in LUTH: An Overview. Dr Iretiola Fajolu Consultant Paeditrician /Senior Lecturer LUTH/CMUL. Facility overview (1). Lagos University Teaching Hospital is a tertiary referral center

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Preterm Admissions in LUTH: An Overview

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  1. Preterm Admissions in LUTH: An Overview DrIretiolaFajolu Consultant Paeditrician/Senior Lecturer LUTH/CMUL

  2. Facility overview (1) • Lagos University Teaching Hospital is a tertiary referral center • It has an O& G department with ANC facilities, a labour ward with 14 suites and 2 operating theatres. • There are 2 postnatal wards where stable babies are nursed by the sides of their mothers • Babies are usually discharged after 48hrs from the postnatal wards • There is also facility for assisted conception currently in the hospital. • The Neonatal unit with two wards - INBORN ward adjoining the labour ward (for babies born in LUTH) and the OUTBORN ward (for babies born outside LUTH and referred for further care)

  3. Facility overview (2) • Inborn ward admission capacity – 40 with 21 incubators and 1 transport incubator • Outborn ward admission capacity – 40 with 15 incubators and 1 transport incubator • The Neonatology unit staff strength: • 4 consultant Neonatologists • 10 Resident doctors • 26 Nurses • 8 support staff • During call hours, there is a consultant on call; with 2 senior and 2 junior registrars and 2-3 house officers, sleeping in with a minimum of 6 nurses and 1 or 2 supportive staff .

  4. Facility overview (3) • There is a children emergency center where babies admitted from outside are initially stabilized before admission or discharge as required • The unit also has access to a pharmacy, microbiology and clinical chemistry laboratory, radiology (X-rays, ultrasound scans, CT scan, MRI), surgical, blood bank, social welfare and pathology services within the hospital. • Discharged babies are followed up in the outpatient clinic till 2 years of life

  5. Facility overview - LUTH • Annual delivery rate - 2400 babies • Monthly admission rate – 70-80 babies • Monthly referral rate - 150 neonates

  6. Some definitions • Preterm – Born before 37 completed weeks of gestation • Extreme preterm = <28 weeks gestation • Early preterm = 28-31 weeks gestation • Moderate preterm = 32-33 weeks gestation • Late preterm = 34-36 weeks gestation • LBW = 1500 to <2500g • VLBW = 1000 to <1500g • ELBW = <1000g

  7. Preterm admission statistics in the last one year at LUTH • Over the one year period we admitted 1057 neonates into the neonatal wards of LUTH • 401 were preterm babies (37.9%) • Preterm discharges – 117 (70.1%) • Total mortality – 116 • Preterm mortality -79 (68.1%) of total mortality • 19.7% of all preterm infants died • 80.3% survival

  8. Pattern of neonatal admissions

  9. Distribution of the preterm babies by preterm category

  10. Mortality by ward

  11. Mortality according to gestational age category

  12. Mortality distribution by birth-weightcategory 55%

  13. Challenges to managing preterm infants • The major challenge encountered in managing preterm infants is with the extreme LBW and and extreme preterm babies • Challenges with respiratory support (unavailability of surfactant, ventilators) • Maintaining temperature (incubators, KMC) • Sepsis (lab support – cost, delayed sampling) • Feeding problems (no BM, NEC) • Shortage of skilled staff • Financial constraints • Poor transport

  14. Way forward • Advocacy – Health care workers, Government and NGO • Educating the population • Education of healthcare workers (ECSB) • Well coordinated neonatal referral • Improved funding for health care • Female empowerment

  15. Thank you

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