1 / 45

Maneesh Batra MD, MPH

Newborn health and survival Overview & Case Study Kiwoko , Uganda GH/HSERV 544 MCH in Developing Countries. Maneesh Batra MD, MPH. Feb 15, 2011. Goals. Provide an overview of the current status of Newborn Survival in the world

bonnie
Télécharger la présentation

Maneesh Batra MD, MPH

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Newborn health and survivalOverview & Case StudyKiwoko, UgandaGH/HSERV 544MCH in Developing Countries Maneesh Batra MD, MPH Feb 15, 2011

  2. Goals • Provide an overview of the current status of Newborn Survival in the world • Place Newborn Survival within the context of Childhood Survival in the world • Provide an in-country example • Highlight potential areas for intervention to improve Newborn Survival

  3. The Newborn Period is Risky - Pop Quiz Each year _ million children (<5 yrs old) die ~8.8 million Each year _ million infants (<1 yr old) die ~5.9 million Each year _ million newborns (<1 mo old) die ~3.6 million = 10,000 per day! How many die within the first 24 hrs of life ? ~1.8 million Black, 2010

  4. Millennium Development Goals • 2000 UN Millennium Declaration: • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger • Achieve universal primary education • Promote gender equality and empower women • Reduce child mortality • Improve maternal health • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases • Ensure environmental sustainability • Develop a global partnership for development • MDG-4 • “Reduce Child Mortality by 2/3 between 1990 and 2015”

  5. Lawn Sem Peri 2010

  6. Is It Possible to Change This Trend?

  7. Childhood Deaths…Where? Black, Lancet 2010

  8. Childhood Deaths…Why? Black, Lancet 2010

  9. Lawn, IJGO 2010

  10. Half of neonatal deaths occur on day 1

  11. Neonatal Deaths – Why? • Physiologic adjustments and adaptation to extrauterine life: • Establish breathing • Change fetal circulation to newborn • Body temperature regulation • Feeding and digestion • Immune system development • Recognizing illness is a challenge • Majority of births occur at home

  12. Neonatal Deaths – Where? • 66% in 10 countries • 99% in low/middle income countries • Majority of deaths occur in-home, not in a health facility

  13. Causes of Neonatal Deaths Lawn, Sem Peri 2010

  14. Lawn, Sem Peri 2011

  15. Neonatal Deaths – Why? • 60-80% of neonatal deaths occur in babies with birth weight <2500g • Risk of early death: • 1500-2499g, 6 times greater • <1500g, 100 times greater

  16. How… • ~3 million newborn deaths can be prevented with low-cost, low-tech interventions • ~$1 per inhabitant per year! • Marginal cost of adding neonatal resuscitation training and equipment for midwives: <$0.02 per capita per year • Most deaths could be prevented with simple interventions such as: • Thermoregulation • Breast feeding, Kangaroo care • Early treatment of infections • A very small minority of patients require costly intensive care

  17. Lawn, IJGO 2010

  18. Stillbirths Newborn deaths Maternal deaths Child Deaths Childhood Pre-pregnancy Pregnancy Birth Newborn/postnatal Risk of Mortality Peaks Around Childbirth Courtesy of ZA Bhutta

  19. Case Study Kiwoko, Uganda

  20. Setting - Uganda • Population: 27 million • 84% rural • Languages: English, Luganda, Swahili • Literacy Rate: • 69% (male), 59% (female) • Per capita GNP: $270 • Fertility rate: 7.1 (5th in world) • Malnourished Children: 26% • Life expectancy: 42 years

  21. Setting - Uganda • Per Capita Govt healthcare spending: $5 • NMR: 29/1000 live births • Annual Neonatal Deaths 40,900 • IMR: 88.3/1000 live births • U5MR: 137/1000 live births • MMR: 435/100,000 live births • Annual Maternal Deaths: 6,100 • Stillbirths: 31/1000 deliveries

  22. Setting - Uganda 21% of childhood deaths are newborns Opportunities for Africa’s Newborns, 2006

  23. Setting – Luwero District • Area: 5773.53 sq. km • Population: 492,184 (proj. 2000) • 91.1% rural • Population within 5 km of a health services unit: 53%. • Doctors to Population Ratio • 1:23,438 • 16 doctors in the district • IMR: 112/1000 live births • U5MR: 150/1000 live births

  24. Setting – Luwero District • Immunization Coverage: 46% • Stunting Rate: 36% • Acute Malnutrition: 7% • Antenatal Care • ANC attendance rate: 75 % • Delivery by trained staff: 36 % • Access to Safe Water: 42% • Latrine Coverage: 54%

  25. Kiwoko Hospital

  26. Kiwoko Hospital • Early 1990s - Abandoned school into a health clinic by Dr. Ian Clarke • One of 3 hospitals in the district • 4 full time doctors • Serves population of 500,000 • Treats 25,000 people per year • 1000 deliveries per year • 1500 operations per year • Most patients arrive by foot or bicycle

  27. Kiwoko Hospital • 150-250 beds • 8 wards (Peds, Malnutrition, Male, Female, Surgical, TB, Maternity, NICU) • Outreach/Education

  28. Kiwoko Hospital - Resources • Majority of care by family members • Sporadic electricity • Rain + well water • Limited vaccine supply • BCG, DTP, Td, Measles, OPV • Limited laboratory • Limited medication supply • Limited blood supply

  29. Kiwoko Hospital - NICU Built by ISIS, opened in 1999

  30. Kiwoko Hospital - NICU Primary Diagnoses: • LBW, Sepsis, Tetanus, Malaria, Meningitis, Asphyxia, Meconium Aspiration, Respiratory Distress

  31. Kiwoko Hospital - NICU • 20 beds, 3 functioning incubators • ½ of admissions inborn • Overall Mortality 20-30% • Tetanus Mortality 80-90%

  32. Why do babies die in Luwero? At Home • Largely unknown magnitude and scope of problem • Barriers to seeking care • Knowledge • $$$$$$$$$ • Impact on family unit • What if the baby dies? • Critical point of intervention!

  33. Why do babies die in Luwero? In the Hospital • In-born • LBW • Sepsis • Asphyxia • Out-born • Delayed presentation • LBW • Sepsis, Meningitis, Skin infections • Tetanus • ? Etiology • Majority present with non-specific signs

  34. World Bank 2003

  35. Improving Newborn Outcomes Framework • Antenatal • Antenatal care • Immunization • Malaria treatment • Maternal nutrition • Birth spacing • Breast feeding counselling

  36. Improving Newborn Outcomes Framework • Peripartum • Skilled birth attendant • Immediate newborn care • Obstetric emergencies

  37. Improving Newborn Outcomes Framework • Postpartum • Recognition of illness • Appropriate initial stabilization • Prevent hypoglycemia • Maintain temperature • Eye care • Prevent/treat infections • Nutritional management of LBW • Availability of referral care • Birth spacing

  38. Thanks!

More Related