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Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia

BACKGROUND: In Ethiopia, the trend of neonatal mortality showed slow pace of reduction from 2000–2016 compared to the reduction in infant and under-five mortality over the same period. This study aimed at unpacking the trends of admission, specific causes and rate of neonatal mortality as well as pr...

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Autores principales: Elmi Farah, Abdifatah, Abbas, Abdulahi Haji, Tahir Ahmed, Ahmed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6138366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30216343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203314
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author Elmi Farah, Abdifatah
Abbas, Abdulahi Haji
Tahir Ahmed, Ahmed
author_facet Elmi Farah, Abdifatah
Abbas, Abdulahi Haji
Tahir Ahmed, Ahmed
author_sort Elmi Farah, Abdifatah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In Ethiopia, the trend of neonatal mortality showed slow pace of reduction from 2000–2016 compared to the reduction in infant and under-five mortality over the same period. This study aimed at unpacking the trends of admission, specific causes and rate of neonatal mortality as well as predictors of neonatal mortality at a general hospital in Somali region of Ethiopia. METHODS: A hospital based retrospective cohort study was conducted from 25(th) of May 2017to 10(th) of June, 2017. All the new-borns admitted in the neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the hospital were reviewed over three years period (Aug2014-May2017). Data were cleaned and exported to SPSS version 20 and both descriptive and analytical analysis were executed. The level of significance was set at P<0.05. Binary logistic regression was used to produce summary of statistics including crude and adjusted odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals. RESULTS: This study reviewed a total of 792 new-borns below the age of 28 days admitted in the NICU of Karamara hospital over a period of three years (August, 2014 to May, 2017). The mean birth weight was 2733 ± 740 g and neonates with normal birth weight stood at 64%. Seven hundred forty seven new-borns (94.3%) were discharged alive while 45 (5.7%) new-borns died in the course of hospitalization making a Neonatal Mortality Rate (NMR) of 5.7% (57 per 1000 live births), and 96 percent of these deaths were early neonatal deaths that occurred in the first one week of life (i.e. <7 days).After all variables which had an association with neonatal mortality (P <0.05) were entered in to a multivariate logistic model to control the effect of confounders: prematurity (AOR = 0.492(0.253, 0.957), P = 0.037) and average length of stay below two days (AOR = 0.418(0.186, 0.936), P = 0.034) were independently associated with neonatal mortality showing protective effect. CONCLUSION: The causes of neonatal death reported in this study are preventable, the neonatal mortality rate is high compared to the national and regional figures. Prematurity and shorter length of stay in the NICU of less than two days showed independent association with neonatal mortality. This calls for more work along the continuum of care, improving the quality of care, early transfer of sick neonates to the NICU along with scaling up establishment of the NICUs in other hospitals of the region.
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spelling pubmed-61383662018-09-27 Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia Elmi Farah, Abdifatah Abbas, Abdulahi Haji Tahir Ahmed, Ahmed PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: In Ethiopia, the trend of neonatal mortality showed slow pace of reduction from 2000–2016 compared to the reduction in infant and under-five mortality over the same period. This study aimed at unpacking the trends of admission, specific causes and rate of neonatal mortality as well as predictors of neonatal mortality at a general hospital in Somali region of Ethiopia. METHODS: A hospital based retrospective cohort study was conducted from 25(th) of May 2017to 10(th) of June, 2017. All the new-borns admitted in the neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the hospital were reviewed over three years period (Aug2014-May2017). Data were cleaned and exported to SPSS version 20 and both descriptive and analytical analysis were executed. The level of significance was set at P<0.05. Binary logistic regression was used to produce summary of statistics including crude and adjusted odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals. RESULTS: This study reviewed a total of 792 new-borns below the age of 28 days admitted in the NICU of Karamara hospital over a period of three years (August, 2014 to May, 2017). The mean birth weight was 2733 ± 740 g and neonates with normal birth weight stood at 64%. Seven hundred forty seven new-borns (94.3%) were discharged alive while 45 (5.7%) new-borns died in the course of hospitalization making a Neonatal Mortality Rate (NMR) of 5.7% (57 per 1000 live births), and 96 percent of these deaths were early neonatal deaths that occurred in the first one week of life (i.e. <7 days).After all variables which had an association with neonatal mortality (P <0.05) were entered in to a multivariate logistic model to control the effect of confounders: prematurity (AOR = 0.492(0.253, 0.957), P = 0.037) and average length of stay below two days (AOR = 0.418(0.186, 0.936), P = 0.034) were independently associated with neonatal mortality showing protective effect. CONCLUSION: The causes of neonatal death reported in this study are preventable, the neonatal mortality rate is high compared to the national and regional figures. Prematurity and shorter length of stay in the NICU of less than two days showed independent association with neonatal mortality. This calls for more work along the continuum of care, improving the quality of care, early transfer of sick neonates to the NICU along with scaling up establishment of the NICUs in other hospitals of the region. Public Library of Science 2018-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC6138366/ /pubmed/30216343 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203314 Text en © 2018 Elmi Farah 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Elmi Farah, Abdifatah
Abbas, Abdulahi Haji
Tahir Ahmed, Ahmed
Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title_full Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title_fullStr Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title_short Trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: A hospital based retrospective cohort study in Somali region of Ethiopia
title_sort trends of admission and predictors of neonatal mortality: a hospital based retrospective cohort study in somali region of ethiopia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6138366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30216343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203314
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