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. 2019 May;39(2):124-127.
doi: 10.1080/20469047.2018.1528757. Epub 2018 Oct 17.

Infection control and treatment guidelines and neonatal mortality in a rural hospital in Uganda

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Infection control and treatment guidelines and neonatal mortality in a rural hospital in Uganda

Christopher Harris et al. Paediatr Int Child Health. 2019 May.

Abstract

Background: The neonatal mortality rate in Uganda has been 24-27/1000 live births for the last 14 years. Aim: To determine the impact on neonatal mortality of the introduction of infection prevention and treatment guidelines in a resource-poor setting. Methods: A prospective study was undertaken in Kagando Hospital, a rural hospital in Western Uganda of infants live-born in hospital and those admitted from the community or other hospitals between 2013 and 2017. Guidelines were developed from a literature review and informed by local doctors and nurses and a visiting paediatrician. The guidelines highlighted that unwell infants should be admitted to the neonatal unit which was a section of the paediatric ward, emphasised hand hygiene, the separation of infants with and without sepsis and that unwell infants should be treated with evidence-based antibiotic regimens and enteral feeds withheld from unwell infants. Mortality within 28 days of birth was audited for 3 months before and after the intervention; the audit was repeated 3 and 5 years later. Results: Pre-intervention, there were 137 neonatal admissions and 79 neonatal deaths in 3 months (0.58 deaths per admission). Post-intervention there were 187 admissions and the death rate was lower (0.26 deaths per admission, p < 0.001). Three years after the intervention, there were 60 deaths among 233 admissions (0.26 deaths per admission, p < 0.001) and, at 5 years, 53 deaths among 315 admissions (0.17 deaths per admission, p < 0.001). Conclusion: These data suggest that the introduction of infection, prevention and treatment guidelines can reduce neonatal mortality in a resource-poor setting.

Keywords: Admissions; Uganda; antibiotics; guidelines; hand hygiene; infection control; mortality; neonate.

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