Newborn-Care Training and Perinatal Mortality in Developing Countries
Top Cited Papers
- 18 February 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 362 (7) , 614-623
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmsa0806033
Abstract
Of the 3.7 million neonatal deaths and 3.3 million stillbirths each year, 98% occur in developing countries. An evaluation of community-based interventions designed to reduce the number of these deaths is needed. With the use of a train-the-trainer model, local instructors trained birth attendants from rural communities in six countries (Argentina, Democratic Republic of Congo, Guatemala, India, Pakistan, and Zambia) in the World Health Organization Essential Newborn Care course (which focuses on routine neonatal care, resuscitation, thermoregulation, breast-feeding, “kangaroo” [skin-to-skin] care, care of the small baby, and common illnesses) and (except in Argentina) in a modified version of the American Academy of Pediatrics Neonatal Resuscitation Program (which teaches basic resuscitation in depth). The Essential Newborn Care intervention was assessed among 57,643 infants with the use of a before-and-after design. The Neonatal Resuscitation Program intervention was assessed as a cluster-randomized, controlled trial involving 62,366 infants. The primary outcome was neonatal death in the first 7 days after birth. The 7-day follow-up rate was 99.2%. After birth attendants were trained in the Essential Newborn Care course, there was no significant reduction from baseline in the rate of neonatal death from all causes in the 7 days after birth (relative risk with training, 0.99; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.81 to 1.22) or in the rate of perinatal death; there was a significant reduction in the rate of stillbirth (relative risk with training, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.54 to 0.88; P=0.003). In clusters of births in which attendants had been randomly assigned to receive training in the Neonatal Resuscitation Program, as compared with control clusters, there was no reduction in the rates of neonatal death in the 7 days after birth, stillbirth, or perinatal death. The rate of neonatal death in the 7 days after birth did not decrease after the introduction of Essential Newborn Care training of community-based birth attendants, although the rate of stillbirths was reduced. Subsequent training in the Neonatal Resuscitation Program did not significantly reduce the mortality rates. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00136708.)Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness strategy on childhood mortality and nutrition in a rural area in Bangladesh: a cluster randomised trialThe Lancet, 2009
- A simulation based technique to estimate intracluster correlation for a binary variableContemporary Clinical Trials, 2009
- Educational Impact of the Neonatal Resuscitation Program in Low-Risk Delivery Centers in a Developing CountryPublished by Elsevier ,2008
- Preventing those so-called stillbirthsBulletin of the World Health Organization, 2008
- Effect of Newborn Resuscitation Training on Health Worker Practices in Pumwani Hospital, KenyaPLOS ONE, 2008
- Impact of packaged interventions on neonatal health: a review of the evidenceHealth Policy and Planning, 2007
- Decreasing Perinatal Mortality in Rural India: A Basic Neonatal Resuscitation ProgramAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2007
- Management of Birth Asphyxia in Home Deliveries in Rural Gadchiroli: The Effect of Two Types of Birth Attendants and of Resuscitating with Mouth-to-Mouth, Tube-Mask or Bag–MaskJournal of Perinatology, 2005
- Evidence-based, cost-effective interventions: how many newborn babies can we save?The Lancet, 2005
- Stillbirths and neonatal encephalopathy in Kathmandu, Nepal: an estimate of the contribution of birth asphyxia to perinatal mortality in a low-income urban populationPaediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 2000