Identifying women giving birth preterm and care at the time of birth: a prospective audit of births at six hospitals in India, Kenya, Pakistan and Uganda.


Journal

BMC pregnancy and childbirth
ISSN: 1471-2393
Titre abrégé: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth
Pays: England
ID NLM: 100967799

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
31 Jul 2020
Historique:
received: 26 07 2018
accepted: 21 07 2020
entrez: 2 8 2020
pubmed: 2 8 2020
medline: 1 6 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Globally, 15 million infants are born preterm each year, and 1 million die due to complications of prematurity. Over 60% of preterm births occur in Sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia. Care at birth for premature infants may be critical for survival and long term outcome. We conducted a prospective audit to assess whether women giving birth preterm could be identified, and to describe cord clamping and neonatal care at hospitals in Africa and south Asia. This prospective audit of livebirths was conducted at six hospitals in Uganda, Kenya, India and Pakistan. Births were considered preterm if between 28 Of 4149 women who gave birth during the audit, data were available for 3687 (90%). As 107 were multiple births, 3781 livebirths were included, of which 257 (7%) were preterm. Antenatal assessment correctly identified 148 infants as 'preterm' and 3429 as 'term', giving a positive predictive value of 72% and negative predictive value of 97%. For term births, cord clamping was usually later at the two Ugandan hospitals, median time to clamping 50 and 76 s, compared with 23 at Kenyatta (Kenya), 7 at CMC (India) and 12 at FBH/LNH (Pakistan). At the latter two, timing was similar between term and preterm births, and between vaginal and Caesarean births. For all the hospitals, the cord was clamped quickly at Caesarean births, with Mbale (Uganda) having the highest median time to clamping (15 s 'term', 19 'preterm'). For preterm infants temperature on admission to the neonatal unit was below 35.5 °C for 50%, and 59 (23%) died before hospital discharge. Antenatal identification of preterm birth was good. Timing of cord clamping varied between hospitals, although at each there was no difference between 'term' and 'preterm' births. For premature infants hypothermia was common, and mortality before hospital discharge was high.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Globally, 15 million infants are born preterm each year, and 1 million die due to complications of prematurity. Over 60% of preterm births occur in Sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia. Care at birth for premature infants may be critical for survival and long term outcome. We conducted a prospective audit to assess whether women giving birth preterm could be identified, and to describe cord clamping and neonatal care at hospitals in Africa and south Asia.
METHODS METHODS
This prospective audit of livebirths was conducted at six hospitals in Uganda, Kenya, India and Pakistan. Births were considered preterm if between 28
RESULTS RESULTS
Of 4149 women who gave birth during the audit, data were available for 3687 (90%). As 107 were multiple births, 3781 livebirths were included, of which 257 (7%) were preterm. Antenatal assessment correctly identified 148 infants as 'preterm' and 3429 as 'term', giving a positive predictive value of 72% and negative predictive value of 97%. For term births, cord clamping was usually later at the two Ugandan hospitals, median time to clamping 50 and 76 s, compared with 23 at Kenyatta (Kenya), 7 at CMC (India) and 12 at FBH/LNH (Pakistan). At the latter two, timing was similar between term and preterm births, and between vaginal and Caesarean births. For all the hospitals, the cord was clamped quickly at Caesarean births, with Mbale (Uganda) having the highest median time to clamping (15 s 'term', 19 'preterm'). For preterm infants temperature on admission to the neonatal unit was below 35.5 °C for 50%, and 59 (23%) died before hospital discharge.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Antenatal identification of preterm birth was good. Timing of cord clamping varied between hospitals, although at each there was no difference between 'term' and 'preterm' births. For premature infants hypothermia was common, and mortality before hospital discharge was high.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32736536
doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-03126-0
pii: 10.1186/s12884-020-03126-0
pmc: PMC7393815
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

439

Subventions

Organisme : Department of Health
ID : DRF-2016-09-057
Pays : United Kingdom
Organisme : Medical Research Council
ID : MR/M017397/1
Pays : United Kingdom
Organisme : National Institute for Health Research
ID : DRF-2016-09-057

Investigateurs

Diane Whitham (D)
Eleanor J Mitchell (EJ)
Peter J Godolphin (PJ)
Lelia Duley (L)
Santosh Benjamin (S)
Jiji Mathews (J)
Manish Kumar (M)
K Anil Kuruvilla (KA)
M Nirmala (M)
Nayana John (N)
Sam Ononge (S)
Mariam Nabwire (M)
Rose Mary Byenkya (RM)
Emilly Nakinja (E)
Grace Engeu Ariokot (GE)
Sarah Namuddu (S)
James Ditai (J)
Stephen Waiswa (S)
Macreen Mudoola (M)
Auma Proscovia (A)
Julian Abesco (J)
Susan Magoba (S)
Zahida Qureshi (Z)
Alfred Osoti (A)
Rachel Musoke (R)
Raheli Mukhwana (R)
Shabeen Naz Masood (SN)
Zehra Naqvi (Z)
Haleema A Hashmi (HA)
Samina Shamim (S)
Syed Kashif Abbas Zaidi (SKA)
Yasir Masood (Y)

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Auteurs

Eleanor J Mitchell (EJ)

Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit, University Of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK. eleanor.mitchell@nottingham.ac.uk.

Santosh Benjamin (S)

Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.

Sam Ononge (S)

Makerere University College of Health Science, Kampala, Uganda.

James Ditai (J)

Sanyu Africa Research Institute, Mbale, Uganda.

Zahida Qureshi (Z)

University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.

Shabeen Naz Masood (SN)

Isra Medical University, Karachi-Campus, Karachi, Pakistan.

Diane Whitham (D)

Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit, University Of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.

Peter J Godolphin (PJ)

Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit, University Of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.

Lelia Duley (L)

Nottingham Clinical Trials Unit, University Of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.

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Classifications MeSH