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Neonatal Survival in Ghana – Challenges and Way forward. 3 rd Annual Scientific Conference College of Health Sciences, KNUST, Kumasi 27 th August 2010 E.O.D Addo-Yobo MB ChB DTCH MSc MWACP FGCP Consultant Paediatrician , SMS-KNUST/KATH Kumasi. Outline.
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Neonatal Survival in Ghana – Challenges and Way forward 3rd Annual Scientific Conference College of Health Sciences, KNUST, Kumasi 27th August 2010 E.O.D Addo-YoboMB ChB DTCH MSc MWACP FGCP Consultant Paediatrician, SMS-KNUST/KATH Kumasi
Outline • Where we are with regard to MD4 • Contribution of Neonatal mortality in achieving MDG4 • Teaching Hospital perspective on Neonatal mortality • Key Challenges for improving Neonatal mortality • Recommendations for improving Neonatal mortality in Ghana • Conclusions
Introduction • Welfare of the state depends on the status of reproductive and child health • Maternal and Child Health Indices are basic indicators of a country’s socio-economic situation quality of life • The child health indices are useful in population projections as well as monitoring and evaluating population and health programmes and policies. • Characteristics of childhood mortality such as age patterns and socio-economic and demographic differentials are useful in addressing factors that have positive or negative impacts on child survival • Analysis of mortality measures is useful in identifying promising directions for health programmes and improving child survival efforts in Ghana.
MDG4 • Reduce by two-thirds, between 1990 and 2015, the under-5 mortality rate. • Indicators • Under-5 mortality rate • Infant mortality rate • Proportion of 1 year old children immunised against measles • Reduced family size/ spacing • Baby friendly health initiatives The developing world is generally not on track to meet the MDG target for under-five mortality.
Infant mortality trends • Improvements in Infant mortality have stalled largely because of difficulties in reducing neonatal mortality • If Maternal mortality rates are increasing (214 in1993) 560 in 2008) in Ghana, neonatal mortality rates are unlikely to be doing any better.
MDG Target • Neonatal deaths regularly constitute about 60 -70% of Infant deaths and 30-40% of U5 deaths over the last 20 years
Limitations with surveys • Information gathered form birth history recall – hence recall bias • The most common problems • misreporting of age at death, • misreporting of dates of birth, • event underreporting (of both the birth and death of a child • True figures on neonatal mortality rates may be higher. (e.g Ghanaian cultural practices that do not allow neonatal deaths to be recognised/counted) • Lack of strong national data on neonatal morbidity and mortality from health institutions
GeneraL FACTS ABOUT neonatal mortality IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES • Key determinants • Prematurity • Asphyxia • LBW • Sepsis • Malformations/congenital abnormalities • “Each of the four DHS surveys found that the neonatal mortality rate after a birth interval of less than 24 months (13% of births in the 10 years preceding the 2003 GDHS) was between 2·6 and 4·2 times the rate after a birth interval of 24 months or more”. • Underlying factors: • Poverty • Poor neonatal care – >40% babies delivered without skilled attendance in Ghana • Under-resources health care facilities • Inadequate neonatal care skills • Paucity of specific information about neonatal morbidity and mortality for action • Cultural practices
We do not seem to have good control on Neonatal mortality yet!
characteristics of mother-baby unit admissions: 2006-9 – kath(SB Nguah et al, 2010. MBU Mortality audit 2006-9: Unpublished) 25,906 admissions of children under 3 months over 4 years • <12 % are under weight (<1.5kg) at birth • >85% were less than one week old • 60-80% delivered at KATH – proportions declining in recent years, with a decline in admission of children born at KATH • 65-70% were delivered by Spontaneous vaginal delivery • Only 5-10% had normal Apgar Scores (8-10) in First minute and 30-35% at 5th Minute • A good proportion of neonatal admissions are normal weight babies from spontaneous vaginal deliveries who require resuscitation at birth.They may be foetally distressed or poorly resuscitated at birth, or both
Inferences • Early (first week) neonatal deaths contribute significantly to infant mortality • There is significant mortality among normal weight babies although low birth weight babies also contribute • Babies born in facilities with good obstetric and neonatal care service (KATH) are less likely to be admitted • Delayed obstetric interventions and possibly resuscitation challenges may be contributing significantly to neonatal mortality in the hospital (?and outside) • Males and females died equally • Birth Weight <1kg had 90% mortality (<2% total admissions)
Key Challenges • Delivery (supervision and action) and Neonatal Resuscitation • Birth Asphyxia (20-40% KATH neonatal deaths) • Neonatal sepsis • (Prematurity) • Neonatal care challenges • Keeping baby warm • Hypoglycaemia:delayed, inappropriate feeding • Birth Injuries • Infection control/Cord care • Early recognition of problems/Delayed referrals • Poor regard for neonates • Poor neonatal record keeping/referrals • Poor neonatal care facilities • Few trained neonatal care givers – many general clinical care givers are challenged by neonatal diagnoses and neonatal care • Emerging challenges abuse of antibiotics with under-dosing and incomplete regimens – emerging pressure on few affordable antibiotics available
OPERATIONAL CHALLENGES No real changes in approach to neonatal care in the past 20 years (…until recently) Departmental approach to service delivery:Paediatrician has the skills, Obstetrician does the job Paediatrician attendance to delivery – ideal but hardly possible now Reluctance of trained doctor to practice paediatrics (neonatal care) in districts Lack of specially trained paediatric nursing staff Birth attendant’s responsibility bias – towards maternal health Bedside dilemmas –who to save, mother or baby - One-man station Lopsided supervision of skills – neonatal resuscitation skills wane Poor awareness/feedback about neonatal outcomes Biased training needs assessment (until most recently) Tug of war for nursing staff (midwives) between Child Health and OB-Gyn Inadequate/under-utilized resuscitation equipment Care becomes more and more technical and labour-intensive as we try to save the very ill and LBW e.g. Oxygen delivery, Intubation, Intravenous access, Ventilation, Antibiotics, Neonatal Monitoring. (who to train)
Way forward -1 The needed improvements in reducing U5 mortality (MDG4) will largely be achieved by major improvements in Neonatal Mortality Significant improvements in neonatal mortality can be achieved to a large extent by addressing causes and management birth asphyxia and neonatal sepsis. This is linked to maternal care: Birth asphyxia and Neonatal sepsis can be controlled by equipping delivery attendants with Neonatal Resuscitation skills and skills for identification of risk factors for peri-natal morbidity and mortality, infection control and treatment of common infections Need to address obstetric risk factors for birth asphyxia and sepsis concurrently: Prolonged labour, Risk deliveries, Early obstetric referrals, Early interventions;Neonatal resuscitation, Infections control and Management, Early referrals and appropriately-equipped referral Centres.
Way forward -2 Short term issues: • Training on neonatal resuscitation, safe deliveries, infection prevention and control • Early neonatal monitoring: Mandatory first week neonatal assessments - as national policy
Way forward -3 Long Term: • Strengthening Child health and neonatal care Units in all regional and district hospitals nationwide to support lover levels of child health care dedicated staff, basic Equipment, training and re-training, appropriate documentation to facilitate follow-up Technical issues involved – Neonatal assessment, drugs, intubation • Develop Paediatric (Neonatal) Nursing training programmes to address local challenges • Training of paediatricians should remain a national priority until every district has a trained paediatrician • Strong national strategy for distribution of trained obstetricians and paediatricians needed: Ideally every district should have a paediatrician and obstetrician • Relevant CPD programmes for child health practitioners • Birth spacing and FP • More research on neonatal issues, adaptation of technologies for improves care (e.g. skamgoa)
Conclusions • Ghana may be on target for most of the MDGs but we are unlikely to achieve our goals unless we significantly reduce Neonatal mortality • Proposed target:80% districts with paediatrician or trained paediatric nurse by 2020 • Promotion of Birth Spacing cannot be forgotten
I will survive ! Thank you