Impact of simple interventions on neonatal mortality in a low-resource teaching hospital in India
- PMID: 17180130
- DOI: 10.1038/sj.jp.7211620
Impact of simple interventions on neonatal mortality in a low-resource teaching hospital in India
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate impact of simple interventions on neonatal mortality in a low-resource teaching hospital in India.
Study design: Before-and-after intervention trial setting: limited resource teaching hospital;
Design: Before and after study.
Interventions: A package of simple interventions was evolved. The interventions included: rational admissions and early discharge, entrusting mothers in care-giving, enforcing asepsis routines, aggressive enteral feeding, abandoning unnecessary interventions, protocol-based management, rational antibiotics and training and empowerment of nurses.
Statistical methods: The categorical and continuous variables were compared with chi (2) and two-tailed tests, respectively.
Results: Neonatal mortality rate declined significantly during the intervention period as compared to control period (20.3 versus 29.3 per 1000 live births; relative risk 0.69, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.57 to 0.85). Most significant decline occurred in sepsis-related deaths. The survival of neonates with birth weight 1000 to 1499 improved over two folds (56.7% versus 24.5%, P<0.01). There was a significant decline in antibiotics use (635/878, 72.3% versus 299/897, 23.2%; P=0.00). The duration of stay in neonatal unit was decreased by a mean of 1.5 day (95% CI 0.9 to 2.8 days) after interventions.
Conclusions: Simple interventions can result in a significant decline in neonatal mortality in hospitals with limited resources. This package is likely to be effective in hospitals with a high proportion of the sepsis deaths.
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