Facility-based care for moderately low birthweight infants in India, Malawi, and Tanzania

Globally, increasing rates of facility-based childbirth enable early intervention for small vulnerable newborns. We describe health system-level inputs, current feeding, and discharge practices for moderately low birthweight (MLBW) infants (1500-10% less than their birthweight; 18.8% of infants were...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLOS global public health 2023-01, Vol.3 (4), p.e0001789
Hauptverfasser: Katherine E A Semrau, Rana R Mokhtar, Karim Manji, Shivaprasad S Goudar, Tisungane Mvalo, Christopher R Sudfeld, Melissa F Young, Bethany A Caruso, Christopher P Duggan, Sarah S Somji, Anne C C Lee, Mohamed Bakari, Kristina Lugangira, Rodrick Kisenge, Linda S Adair, Irving F Hoffman, Friday Saidi, Melda Phiri, Kingsly Msimuko, Fadire Nyirenda, Mallory Michalak, Sangappa M Dhaded, Roopa M Bellad, Sujata Misra, Sanghamitra Panda, Sunil S Vernekar, Veena Herekar, Manjunath Sommannavar, Rashmita B Nayak, S Yogeshkumar, Saraswati Welling, Krysten North, Kiersten Israel-Ballard, Kimberly L Mansen, Stephanie L Martin, Katelyn Fleming, Katharine Miller, Arthur Pote, Lauren Spigel, Danielle E Tuller, Linda Vesel, LIFE Study Group
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Globally, increasing rates of facility-based childbirth enable early intervention for small vulnerable newborns. We describe health system-level inputs, current feeding, and discharge practices for moderately low birthweight (MLBW) infants (1500-10% less than their birthweight; 18.8% of infants were discharged with weights below facility-specific policy [1800g in India, 1500g in Malawi, and 2000g in Tanzania]. Based on descriptive analysis, we found constraints in health system inputs which have the potential to hinder high quality care for MLBW infants. Targeted LBW-specific lactation support, discharge at appropriate weight, and access to feeding alternatives would position MLBW for successful feeding and growth post-discharge.
ISSN:2767-3375
DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0001789