1 / 21

Care of sick newborns at KNH

Care of sick newborns at KNH. Fred Were EBS UON NBS. Scope. Some background The workload & bed space; are we prepared? The structure; are we ready for the challenge? Service Delivery; are we there?. Background- the KNH NBU has grown in;. Physical infrastructure

fionan
Télécharger la présentation

Care of sick newborns at KNH

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. Care of sick newborns at KNH Fred Were EBS UON NBS

  2. Scope • Some background • The workload & bed space; are we prepared? • The structure; are we ready for the challenge? • Service Delivery; are we there?

  3. Background- the KNH NBU has grown in; • Physical infrastructure • From a small unit at KMTC IN 1980 to a large 7 room unit o first floor • From a SCU to a level III NICU • Human resource training • From a small number of non-neonatology trained medical staff to 6 specialists • From on-job trained nursing staff to several fully trained experts • Yonger human resource numbers • From a Resident Doctor population of 4 to 12-20 • Many trainee nurses with sufficient skills for the unit

  4. Backgroundtrends in survival/mortality of VLBW infants at KNH Meme JS, MMED Thesis, Kasirye EAMJ 1992;69, Mukhwana EAMJ 2002; 79, Were F 2009 EAMJ 374

  5. Message • There has been no improvement in survival of VLBW infants at this unit in 4 decades despite other apparent changes of health systems. • Mukhwana’s study actually demonstrated that less than 30% of VLBW pretems survived the newborn period

  6. THE WORKLOAD; ARE WE PREPARED?

  7. Workload-Current estimates/year

  8. Workload-Estimated Increase Burden in free mat care era

  9. This will lead to requirement of more NICU spaceThe bed capacity needs are determined by; • The birth cohort in the catchment area (KNH & Surrounding facilities without NICU) • The projected complication rates (Prematurity, Asphyxia rates e t c) • Patient selection policies (All preterms versus ≥28weeks)

  10. Requirements of NICU space Developed countries KNH (Low Resource Settings) High complications rates Prematurity/LBW rates >10% Asphyxia rates nearer 5% ? 1 NICU bed /1000live births • Low complications rates • Prematurity/LBW <5% • Asphyxia <1% • Need 1 NICU bed/2000live birth It is recommended that the smallest NICU should be 4 bed to break even And at least 12 beds to achieve maximal cost benefit

  11. Gaps and Opportunities • The demand for NICU services is high in KNH • The demand is even higher in the expanded metropolis • There is an apparent upsurge of patients capable of paying for the services • KNH can place herself as a cost-beneficial /even profitable unit

  12. The structure; are we ready for the challenge?

  13. Structural Organization

  14. The Modern Structure of NBSBed distribution

  15. Proposed KNH Model

  16. Gaps and opportunities • The present bed capacity is grossly inadequate for even the KNH cohort alone • The overall organization is also sub-optimal • Current political interest in MNCH • Increasing interest in MNCH by philanthropists and donors

  17. Service delivery; are we there?

  18. The Ideal unit should be covered by • Senior clinicians/Nurses with knowledge and skills needed for all the levels of care working at 42-48 hr week • Mid level clinicians/nurses with working 48-60 hour week; • Other necessary support staff (specialist paediatricians, radiologists)

  19. The Ideal unit should also have • Dedicated emergency laboratory services available (including emergency self use) • Easily accessible emergency radiology services with near ZERO turn around time • Rapidly accessible additional consultant services (surgical, other paediatric specialties)

  20. Such a unit should also have an appropriate HR structure

  21. Gaps and opportunities • No Fellowship training • No care guidelines for unit • Inadequate medical products • Abundant training demand in region • Political good will for development

More Related