Outborn newborns drive birth asphyxia mortality rates—An 8 year analysis at a rural level two nursery in Uganda

Birth asphyxia is a leading cause of global neonatal mortality. Most cases occur in low- and middle- income countries and contribute to half of neonatal deaths in Uganda. Improved understanding of the risk factors associated with mortality among these patients is needed. We performed a retrospective...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLOS GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH 2023, Vol.3 (11), p.e0002261-e0002261
Hauptverfasser: Hedstrom, Anna, Nyonyintono, James, Mubiri, Paul, Namakula Mirembe, Hilda, Magnusson, Brooke, Nakakande, Josephine, MacGuffie, Molly, Nsubuga, Mushin, Waiswa, Peter, Nambuya, Harriet, Batra, Maneesh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Birth asphyxia is a leading cause of global neonatal mortality. Most cases occur in low- and middle- income countries and contribute to half of neonatal deaths in Uganda. Improved understanding of the risk factors associated with mortality among these patients is needed. We performed a retrospective cohort study of a clinical database and report maternal demographics, clinical characteristics and outcomes from neonates with birth asphyxia at a Ugandan level two unit from 2014 through 2021. “Inborn” patients were born at the hospital studied and “outborn” were born at another facility or home and then admitted to the hospital studied. Doctors assigned the patient’s primary diagnosis at death or discharge. We performed a Poisson model regression of factors associated with mortality among patients with asphyxia. The study included 1,565 patients with birth asphyxia and the proportion who were outborn rose from 26% to 71% over eight years. Mortality in asphyxiated patients increased over the same period from 9% to 27%. Factors independently associated with increased death included outborn birth location (ARR 2.1, p
ISSN:2767-3375
2767-3375
DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0002261