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Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review

BACKGROUND: Prematurity (gestational age <37 completed weeks) accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths worldwide and most of these occur in the low-resource countries. Understanding factors that determine the best chances of preterm survival is imperative in order to enhance the care of neona...

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Autores principales: Agbeno, Evans Kofi, Osarfo, Joseph, Ashong, Joyce, Anane-Fenin, Betty, Okai, Emmanuel, Ofori, Anthony Amanfo, Aliyu, Mohammed, Opoku, Douglas Aninng, Ken-Amoah, Sebastian, Ashong, Joycelyn A., Soltani, Hora
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33481960
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246005
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author Agbeno, Evans Kofi
Osarfo, Joseph
Ashong, Joyce
Anane-Fenin, Betty
Okai, Emmanuel
Ofori, Anthony Amanfo
Aliyu, Mohammed
Opoku, Douglas Aninng
Ken-Amoah, Sebastian
Ashong, Joycelyn A.
Soltani, Hora
author_facet Agbeno, Evans Kofi
Osarfo, Joseph
Ashong, Joyce
Anane-Fenin, Betty
Okai, Emmanuel
Ofori, Anthony Amanfo
Aliyu, Mohammed
Opoku, Douglas Aninng
Ken-Amoah, Sebastian
Ashong, Joycelyn A.
Soltani, Hora
author_sort Agbeno, Evans Kofi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prematurity (gestational age <37 completed weeks) accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths worldwide and most of these occur in the low-resource countries. Understanding factors that determine the best chances of preterm survival is imperative in order to enhance the care of neonates and reduce adverse outcomes in such complicated births. AIM: This was to find out the proportions of preterm babies who survived at the Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital (CCTH) and the factors which influenced their survival. METHOD: This was a retrospective review of data on all the live preterm babies seen at the SCBU of CCTH from 2010 to 2019. Data on 2,254 babies that met the inclusion criteria were extracted. Descriptive statistics were generated and tests of association done with chi-square and multivariable logistic regression. OUTCOME: The main outcome measure was the proportion of live preterm neonates who were discharged after SCBU admissions. RESULTS: The CCTH had a total of 27,320 deliveries from 2010 to 2019. Of these, 1,282 were live preterm births, giving a prevalence of live preterm babies over the ten-year period of 4.7% (1,282/27,320). An increasing trend in prevalence was observed with 2019 recording the highest at 9% (271/3027). Most (48.8%) of the deliveries were vaginal, 39.2% were by caesarean section (CS); the mode of birth for 12% of the women were not documented. The mean gestational age was 31.8 (±2.77) weeks. Of the birth weights documented, <1000g babies accounted for 11.9%, 1000–1499g babies made up 34.8%, while 1500g to 2499g babies accounted for 42.6%. The babies with weights >2500g made up only 3.7%. The average length of hospital stay was 8.3 (±9.88) days. Regarding the main outcome variable, 67.6% were discharged alive, 27.6% died and 4.9% were unaccounted for due to incomplete documentation. Factors which influenced survival were: birth weight (p <0.001); gestational age (p <0.001); mode and place of delivery (p <0.001 for both); APGAR scores at 1(st) and 5(th) minutes (p <0.001); and length of stay at the SCBU (p <0.001). No association was found for sex of the baby, maternal age and parity. CONCLUSION: This study shows the possibility of achieving good preterm survival rates through the provision of specialised neonatal care, even in resource-constrained countries. This provides an updated benchmark for clinical decision-making and antenatal counselling. It also highlights the problem of inadequate data capture in our part of the world, which needs considerable improvement.
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spelling pubmed-78225192021-01-29 Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review Agbeno, Evans Kofi Osarfo, Joseph Ashong, Joyce Anane-Fenin, Betty Okai, Emmanuel Ofori, Anthony Amanfo Aliyu, Mohammed Opoku, Douglas Aninng Ken-Amoah, Sebastian Ashong, Joycelyn A. Soltani, Hora PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Prematurity (gestational age <37 completed weeks) accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths worldwide and most of these occur in the low-resource countries. Understanding factors that determine the best chances of preterm survival is imperative in order to enhance the care of neonates and reduce adverse outcomes in such complicated births. AIM: This was to find out the proportions of preterm babies who survived at the Special Care Baby Unit (SCBU) in the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital (CCTH) and the factors which influenced their survival. METHOD: This was a retrospective review of data on all the live preterm babies seen at the SCBU of CCTH from 2010 to 2019. Data on 2,254 babies that met the inclusion criteria were extracted. Descriptive statistics were generated and tests of association done with chi-square and multivariable logistic regression. OUTCOME: The main outcome measure was the proportion of live preterm neonates who were discharged after SCBU admissions. RESULTS: The CCTH had a total of 27,320 deliveries from 2010 to 2019. Of these, 1,282 were live preterm births, giving a prevalence of live preterm babies over the ten-year period of 4.7% (1,282/27,320). An increasing trend in prevalence was observed with 2019 recording the highest at 9% (271/3027). Most (48.8%) of the deliveries were vaginal, 39.2% were by caesarean section (CS); the mode of birth for 12% of the women were not documented. The mean gestational age was 31.8 (±2.77) weeks. Of the birth weights documented, <1000g babies accounted for 11.9%, 1000–1499g babies made up 34.8%, while 1500g to 2499g babies accounted for 42.6%. The babies with weights >2500g made up only 3.7%. The average length of hospital stay was 8.3 (±9.88) days. Regarding the main outcome variable, 67.6% were discharged alive, 27.6% died and 4.9% were unaccounted for due to incomplete documentation. Factors which influenced survival were: birth weight (p <0.001); gestational age (p <0.001); mode and place of delivery (p <0.001 for both); APGAR scores at 1(st) and 5(th) minutes (p <0.001); and length of stay at the SCBU (p <0.001). No association was found for sex of the baby, maternal age and parity. CONCLUSION: This study shows the possibility of achieving good preterm survival rates through the provision of specialised neonatal care, even in resource-constrained countries. This provides an updated benchmark for clinical decision-making and antenatal counselling. It also highlights the problem of inadequate data capture in our part of the world, which needs considerable improvement. Public Library of Science 2021-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7822519/ /pubmed/33481960 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246005 Text en © 2021 Agbeno 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
Agbeno, Evans Kofi
Osarfo, Joseph
Ashong, Joyce
Anane-Fenin, Betty
Okai, Emmanuel
Ofori, Anthony Amanfo
Aliyu, Mohammed
Opoku, Douglas Aninng
Ken-Amoah, Sebastian
Ashong, Joycelyn A.
Soltani, Hora
Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title_full Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title_fullStr Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title_short Determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in Ghana: A ten-year review
title_sort determinants of preterm survival in a tertiary hospital in ghana: a ten-year review
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7822519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33481960
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246005
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