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Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment

OBJECTIVE: To assess readiness and quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation practices in public health facilities in Afghanistan. DESIGN: Cross-sectional assessment. SETTING: 226 public health facilities in Afghanistan, including 77 public health facilities with at least five bir...

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Autores principales: Atiqzai, Faridullah, Manalai, Partamin, Amin, Sher Shah, Edmond, Karen M, Naziri, Malalai, Soroush, Mohammad Samim, Sultana, Sharmina, Yousufi, Khaksar, van den Akker, Thomas, Stekelenburg, Jelle, Tappis, Hannah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6720229/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31473621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030496
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author Atiqzai, Faridullah
Manalai, Partamin
Amin, Sher Shah
Edmond, Karen M
Naziri, Malalai
Soroush, Mohammad Samim
Sultana, Sharmina
Yousufi, Khaksar
van den Akker, Thomas
Stekelenburg, Jelle
Tappis, Hannah
author_facet Atiqzai, Faridullah
Manalai, Partamin
Amin, Sher Shah
Edmond, Karen M
Naziri, Malalai
Soroush, Mohammad Samim
Sultana, Sharmina
Yousufi, Khaksar
van den Akker, Thomas
Stekelenburg, Jelle
Tappis, Hannah
author_sort Atiqzai, Faridullah
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To assess readiness and quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation practices in public health facilities in Afghanistan. DESIGN: Cross-sectional assessment. SETTING: 226 public health facilities in Afghanistan, including 77 public health facilities with at least five births per day (high-volume facilities) and 149 of 1736 public health facilities with fewer than five births per day (low-volume facilities). PARTICIPANTS: Managers of 226 public health facilities, 734 skilled birth attendants (SBAs) working at these facilities, and 643 women and their newborns observed during childbirth at 77 high-volume health facilities. OUTCOME MEASURES: Availability of knowledgeable SBAs, availability of supplies and compliance with global guidelines for essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation practices. RESULTS: At high-volume facilities, 569/636 (87.9%) of babies were dried immediately after birth, 313/636 (49.2%) were placed in skin-to-skin contact with their mother and 581/636 (89.7%) had their umbilical cord cut with a sterile blade or scissors. A total of 87 newborn resuscitation attempts were observed. Twenty-four of the 87 (27.5%) began to breath or cry after simply clearing the airway or on stimulation. In the remaining 63 (72.5%) cases, a healthcare worker began resuscitation with a bag and mask; however, only 54 (62%) used a correct size of mask and three babies died as their resuscitation with bag and mask was unsuccessful. CONCLUSIONS: The study indicates room for improvement of the quality of neonatal resuscitation practices at public health facilities in Afghanistan, requiring only strengthening of the current best practices in newborn care. Certain basic and effective aspects of essential newborn care that can be improved on with little additional resources were also missing, such as skin-to-skin contact of the babies with their mother. Improvement of compliance with the standard newborn care practices must be ensured to reduce preventable newborn mortality and morbidity in Afghanistan.
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spelling pubmed-67202292019-09-17 Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment Atiqzai, Faridullah Manalai, Partamin Amin, Sher Shah Edmond, Karen M Naziri, Malalai Soroush, Mohammad Samim Sultana, Sharmina Yousufi, Khaksar van den Akker, Thomas Stekelenburg, Jelle Tappis, Hannah BMJ Open Global Health OBJECTIVE: To assess readiness and quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation practices in public health facilities in Afghanistan. DESIGN: Cross-sectional assessment. SETTING: 226 public health facilities in Afghanistan, including 77 public health facilities with at least five births per day (high-volume facilities) and 149 of 1736 public health facilities with fewer than five births per day (low-volume facilities). PARTICIPANTS: Managers of 226 public health facilities, 734 skilled birth attendants (SBAs) working at these facilities, and 643 women and their newborns observed during childbirth at 77 high-volume health facilities. OUTCOME MEASURES: Availability of knowledgeable SBAs, availability of supplies and compliance with global guidelines for essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation practices. RESULTS: At high-volume facilities, 569/636 (87.9%) of babies were dried immediately after birth, 313/636 (49.2%) were placed in skin-to-skin contact with their mother and 581/636 (89.7%) had their umbilical cord cut with a sterile blade or scissors. A total of 87 newborn resuscitation attempts were observed. Twenty-four of the 87 (27.5%) began to breath or cry after simply clearing the airway or on stimulation. In the remaining 63 (72.5%) cases, a healthcare worker began resuscitation with a bag and mask; however, only 54 (62%) used a correct size of mask and three babies died as their resuscitation with bag and mask was unsuccessful. CONCLUSIONS: The study indicates room for improvement of the quality of neonatal resuscitation practices at public health facilities in Afghanistan, requiring only strengthening of the current best practices in newborn care. Certain basic and effective aspects of essential newborn care that can be improved on with little additional resources were also missing, such as skin-to-skin contact of the babies with their mother. Improvement of compliance with the standard newborn care practices must be ensured to reduce preventable newborn mortality and morbidity in Afghanistan. BMJ Publishing Group 2019-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6720229/ /pubmed/31473621 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030496 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Global Health
Atiqzai, Faridullah
Manalai, Partamin
Amin, Sher Shah
Edmond, Karen M
Naziri, Malalai
Soroush, Mohammad Samim
Sultana, Sharmina
Yousufi, Khaksar
van den Akker, Thomas
Stekelenburg, Jelle
Tappis, Hannah
Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title_full Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title_fullStr Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title_full_unstemmed Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title_short Quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in Afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
title_sort quality of essential newborn care and neonatal resuscitation at health facilities in afghanistan: a cross-sectional assessment
topic Global Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6720229/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31473621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030496
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