Newborn care behaviours and neonatal survival: evidence from sub‐Saharan Africa

Objective To review evidence from sub‐Saharan Africa for the association between the practice or promotion of essential newborn care behaviours and neonatal survival. Methods We searched MEDLINE for English language, peer‐reviewed literature published since 2005. The study population was neonates re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tropical medicine & international health 2013-11, Vol.18 (11), p.1294-1316
Hauptverfasser: Penfold, Suzanne, Willey, Barbara A., Schellenberg, Joanna
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To review evidence from sub‐Saharan Africa for the association between the practice or promotion of essential newborn care behaviours and neonatal survival. Methods We searched MEDLINE for English language, peer‐reviewed literature published since 2005. The study population was neonates residing in a sub‐Saharan Africa country who were not HIV positive. Outcomes were all‐cause neonatal or early neonatal mortality or one of the three main causes of neonatal mortality: complications of preterm birth, infections and intrapartum‐related neonatal events. Interventions included were the practice or promotion of recommended newborn care behaviours including warmth, hygiene, breastfeeding, resuscitation and management of illness. We included study designs with a concurrent comparison group. Study quality was assessed using the Cochrane EPOC or Newcastle–Ottawa tools and summarised using GRADE. Results Eleven papers met the search criteria and most were at low risk of bias. We found evidence that delivering on a clean surface, newborn resuscitation, early initiation and exclusive breastfeeding, Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) for low‐birthweight babies, and distribution of clean delivery kits were associated with reduced risks of neonatal mortality or the main causes of neonatal mortality. There was evidence that training community birth attendants in resuscitation and administering antibiotics, and establishing women's groups can improve neonatal survival. Conclusion There is a remarkable lack of robust evidence from sub‐Saharan Africa on the association between practice or promotion of newborn care behaviours and newborn survival. ObjectifAnalyser les données d'Afrique subsaharienne sur l'association entre la pratique ou la promotion des comportements de soins essentiels aux nouveau‐nés et à la survie néonatale.MéthodesNous avons effectué des recherches sur Medline pour la littérature, évaluée par les pairs, en langue anglaise, publiée depuis 2005. La population de l’étude était les nouveau‐nés résidant dans un pays d'Afrique subsaharienne qui n’étaient pas VIH positifs. Les résultats étaient toutes causes de la mortalité néonatale ou néonatale précoce ou l'une des trois principales causes de mortalité néonatale: complications de la prématurité, infections et événements néonatales associés à l'intrapartum. Les interventions consistaient à la pratique ou la promotion des comportements de soins recommandés aux nouveau‐nés, y compris la chaleur, l'hygiène, l'al
ISSN:1360-2276
1365-3156
DOI:10.1111/tmi.12193