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Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal

BACKGROUND: Delivery of essential newborn care is key to reducing neonatal mortality rates, yet coverage of protective birth practices remains incomplete and variable, with or without skilled attendance. Evidence of changes over time in newborn care provision, disaggregated by care practice and deli...

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Autores principales: Crowe, Sonya, Prost, Audrey, Hossen, Munir, Azad, Kishwar, Kuddus, Abdul, Roy, Swati, Nair, Nirmala, Tripathy, Prasanta, Saville, Naomi, Sen, Aman, Sikorski, Catherine, Manandhar, Dharma, Costello, Anthony, Pagel, Christina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4503724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26176535
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127893
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author Crowe, Sonya
Prost, Audrey
Hossen, Munir
Azad, Kishwar
Kuddus, Abdul
Roy, Swati
Nair, Nirmala
Tripathy, Prasanta
Saville, Naomi
Sen, Aman
Sikorski, Catherine
Manandhar, Dharma
Costello, Anthony
Pagel, Christina
author_facet Crowe, Sonya
Prost, Audrey
Hossen, Munir
Azad, Kishwar
Kuddus, Abdul
Roy, Swati
Nair, Nirmala
Tripathy, Prasanta
Saville, Naomi
Sen, Aman
Sikorski, Catherine
Manandhar, Dharma
Costello, Anthony
Pagel, Christina
author_sort Crowe, Sonya
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Delivery of essential newborn care is key to reducing neonatal mortality rates, yet coverage of protective birth practices remains incomplete and variable, with or without skilled attendance. Evidence of changes over time in newborn care provision, disaggregated by care practice and delivery type, can be used by policymakers to review efforts to reduce mortality. We examine such trends in four areas using control arm trial data. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analysed data from the control arms of cluster randomised controlled trials in Bangladesh (27 553 births), eastern India (8 939), Dhanusha, Nepal (15 344) and Makwanpur, Nepal (6 765) over the period 2001–2011. For each trial, we calculated the observed proportion of attended births and the coverage of WHO essential newborn care practices by year, adjusted for clustering and stratification. To explore factors contributing to the observed trends, we then analysed expected trends due only to observed shifts in birth attendance, accounted for stratification, delivery type and statistically significant interaction terms, and examined disaggregated trends in care practice coverage by delivery type. Attended births increased over the study periods in all areas from very low rates, reaching a maximum of only 30% of deliveries. Newborn care practice trends showed marked heterogeneity within and between areas. Adjustment for stratification, birth attendance and interaction revealed that care practices could change in opposite directions over time and/or between delivery types – e.g. in Bangladesh hygienic cord-cutting and skin-to-skin contact fell in attended deliveries but not home deliveries, whereas in India birth attendant hand-washing rose for institutional deliveries but fell for home deliveries. CONCLUSIONS: Coverage of many essential newborn care practices is improving, albeit slowly and unevenly across sites and delivery type. Time trend analyses of birth patterns and essential newborn care practices can inform policy-makers about effective intervention strategies.
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spelling pubmed-45037242015-07-17 Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal Crowe, Sonya Prost, Audrey Hossen, Munir Azad, Kishwar Kuddus, Abdul Roy, Swati Nair, Nirmala Tripathy, Prasanta Saville, Naomi Sen, Aman Sikorski, Catherine Manandhar, Dharma Costello, Anthony Pagel, Christina PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Delivery of essential newborn care is key to reducing neonatal mortality rates, yet coverage of protective birth practices remains incomplete and variable, with or without skilled attendance. Evidence of changes over time in newborn care provision, disaggregated by care practice and delivery type, can be used by policymakers to review efforts to reduce mortality. We examine such trends in four areas using control arm trial data. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analysed data from the control arms of cluster randomised controlled trials in Bangladesh (27 553 births), eastern India (8 939), Dhanusha, Nepal (15 344) and Makwanpur, Nepal (6 765) over the period 2001–2011. For each trial, we calculated the observed proportion of attended births and the coverage of WHO essential newborn care practices by year, adjusted for clustering and stratification. To explore factors contributing to the observed trends, we then analysed expected trends due only to observed shifts in birth attendance, accounted for stratification, delivery type and statistically significant interaction terms, and examined disaggregated trends in care practice coverage by delivery type. Attended births increased over the study periods in all areas from very low rates, reaching a maximum of only 30% of deliveries. Newborn care practice trends showed marked heterogeneity within and between areas. Adjustment for stratification, birth attendance and interaction revealed that care practices could change in opposite directions over time and/or between delivery types – e.g. in Bangladesh hygienic cord-cutting and skin-to-skin contact fell in attended deliveries but not home deliveries, whereas in India birth attendant hand-washing rose for institutional deliveries but fell for home deliveries. CONCLUSIONS: Coverage of many essential newborn care practices is improving, albeit slowly and unevenly across sites and delivery type. Time trend analyses of birth patterns and essential newborn care practices can inform policy-makers about effective intervention strategies. Public Library of Science 2015-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4503724/ /pubmed/26176535 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127893 Text en © 2015 Crowe et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Crowe, Sonya
Prost, Audrey
Hossen, Munir
Azad, Kishwar
Kuddus, Abdul
Roy, Swati
Nair, Nirmala
Tripathy, Prasanta
Saville, Naomi
Sen, Aman
Sikorski, Catherine
Manandhar, Dharma
Costello, Anthony
Pagel, Christina
Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title_full Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title_fullStr Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title_short Generating Insights from Trends in Newborn Care Practices from Prospective Population-Based Studies: Examples from India, Bangladesh and Nepal
title_sort generating insights from trends in newborn care practices from prospective population-based studies: examples from india, bangladesh and nepal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4503724/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26176535
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127893
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