| Literature DB >> 22412355 |
Hadley K Herbert1, Anne C C Lee, Aruna Chandran, Igor Rudan, Abdullah H Baqui.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite recent achievements to reduce child mortality, neonatal deaths continue to remain high, accounting for 41% of all deaths in children under five years of age worldwide, of which over 90% occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Infections are a leading cause of death and limitations in care seeking for ill neonates contribute to high mortality rates. As estimates for care-seeking behaviors in LMICs have not been studied, this review describes care seeking for neonatal illnesses in LMICs, with particular attention to type of care sought. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22412355 PMCID: PMC3295826 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Literature flowchart of care seeking for ill or suspected ill neonates.
Footnote 1: The following databases did not yield any search results: UNICEF, Reproductive Health Gateway, Dolphn, DHS, SPA, and African Trials.
Characteristics of studies that describe care seeking for ill or suspected ill neonates.
| Primary Author, Year | Country | Rural/Urban | Study Design | Study Setting | Study Sample ( | Neonates with Illness/Suspected Illness (n) |
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| Ahmed, 2001 | Bangladesh | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | 4 rural subdistricts, Chittagong and Jessore | 1511,511 | 740 | Any care: 644 (87%); From facility: 30 (4%); From provider: 614 (82%) |
| Bhandari, 2002 | India | Urban | Cross-sectional community survey | Urban slum, Delhi | 21 | 9 | Any care: 2 (22%); From facility: 2 (22%) |
| Mohan, 2008 | India | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | Rural district, Rajasthan | 290 | 202 | Any care: 63 (31%); From facility: 24 (12%); From provider: 20 (10%) |
| Baqui, 2008 | Bangladesh | Rural | Cross-section community survey, nested in C-RCT | Sylhet district | Baseline: 5,577 | Baseline: 1,226 | Baseline: Any care: 498 (41%); From provider: 498 (41%) |
| Dongre, 2008 | India | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | Rural district, Wardha | 1160 | 321 | Any care: 134 (42%); From facility: 56 (17%) |
| Dongre, 2009 | India | Urban | Cross-sectional community survey | Field practice area, Wardha | 72 | 27 | Any care: 27 (100%); From provider: 27 (100%) |
| Willis, 2009 | India | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | Rural block, Uttar Pradesh | 255 | 158 | Any care: 120 (76%); From provider: 62 (39%) |
| Chowdhury, 2011 | Bangladesh | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | Rural subdistrict, Matlab | 365 | 365 | Any care: 228 (62%); From facility: 2 (1%); From provider: 226 (62%) |
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| Bazzano, 2008 | Ghana | Rural | Cross-sectional community survey | 3 villages and 1 town, Kintampo District | 2,878 | 59 | Any care: 36 (61%); From provider: 36 (61%) |
| Manji, 2009 | Tanzania | Urban/rural | Cross-sectional community survey | N/A | N/A | N/A | Any care: N/A (100%) |
| Waiswa, 2010 | Uganda | Rural | Cross-sectional health center survey | 16 health facilities | 64 | 6 | Any care: 6 (100%); From facility: 6 (100%) |
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| Manandhar, 2004 | Nepal | Rural | C-RCT | 42 clusters, Makwanpur district | Control: 3,226 | Control: 1,320 | Control: Any care: 131 (10%); From facility: 131 (10%); |
| Intervention: 2,899 | Intervention: 919 | Intervention: Any care: 219 (24%); From facility: 219 (24%) | |||||
| Kumar, 2008 | India | Rural | C-RCT | Household survey | Control: 988 | Control: 296 | Control: Any care: 254 (86%); From provider: 235 (80%) |
| ENC: 1,458 | ENC: 319 | ENC: Any care: 257 (81%); From provider: 230 (73%) | |||||
| ENCT: 1,039 | ENCT: 227 | ENCT: Any care: 204 (89%); From provider: 182 (80%) | |||||
| McPherson, 2008 | Nepal | Rural | Before/after intervention | 106 rural villages, Siraha District | N/A | N/A | Before: Any care: N/A (78%); After: Any care: N/A (85%) |
| Dongre, 2009 | India | Rural | Before/after intervention | 23 villages, Wardha | Before: 404 | Before: 246 | Before: Any care: 119 (48%); From facility: 119 (48%) |
| After: 393 | After: 147 | After: Any care: 114 (78%); From facility: 114 (78%) | |||||
| Azad, 2010 | Bangladesh | Rural | C-RCT | Three rural districts, Bogra, Faridpur, Moulavibazar | Control: 3,227 | Control: 923 | Control: Any care: 244 (24%) |
| Intervention: 3,162 | Intervention: 866 | Intervention: Any care: 195 (23%) | |||||
| Darmstadt, 2010 | Bangladesh | Rural | C-RCT | Rural subdistrict, Mirzapur | Control: 5,241 | Control baseline: 812 | Control baseline: Any care: 763 (94%); From provider: 222 (27%) |
| Control endpoint: 400 | Control endpoint: Any care: 384 (96%); From provider: 138 (35%) | ||||||
| Intervention: 4,616 | Intervention baseline: 733 | Intervention baseline: Any care: 682 (93%); From provider: 225 (31%) | |||||
| Intervention endpoint: 355 | Intervention endpoint: Any care: 344 (97%); From provider: 198 (56%) | ||||||
| Tripathy, 2010 | India | Rural | C-RCT | 36 clusters, Jharkhand and Orissa | Control: 8,867 | Control: 2,388; | Control: Any care: 1050 (44%) |
| Intervention: 9,468 | Intervention: 1,739 | Intervention: Any care: 940 (54%) | |||||
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| Awasthi, 2006 | India | Rural | Cross-sectional hospital survey | 2 public hospitals, Lucknow | 200 | 79 | Any care: 46 (56%); From provider: 46 (56%) |
| Awasthi, 2008 | India | Urban | Prospective follow-up study | Urban city, Lucknow | 289 | 79 | Any care: 64 (81%); From provider: 64 (81%) |
| Awasthi, 2009 | India | Urban | Before/after intervention | Rural village, Sarojininagor Block | 510 | Before: 242 | Before: Any care: 196 (81%); From provider: 111 (46%) |
| After 217 | After: Any care: 192 (89%) | ||||||
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| Ogunlesi, 2011 | Nigeria | Urban | Cross-sectional health center survey | 1 public hospital, Sagamu | 182 | 182 | Any care: 144 (79%); From facility: 144 (79%) |
Percentage reported as a proportion of all neonates with an illness or suspected illness reported by each study.
Data obtained via correspondence with corresponding author.
Abbreviations: C-RCT, cluster randomized controlled trial; CHW, community health worker; ENC, essential newborn care; ENCT, essential newborn care plus thermostat; N/A, not available.
Quality of data regarding care seeking for ill or suspected ill neonates: summary of included studies.
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| Study Design | Population Representativeness | Definitions of Illness, Care Seeking, and Type of Health Care | Generalizability to Population of Interest | Precision: Study Sample with >50 Neonates | ||
| Prospective Versus Retrospective | Recall Period | Quality of Definitions | Consistency | ||||
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| Prospective ( | ≤2 mo ( | Population based with minimal bias ( | Defined illness ( | Wide range of inconsistency of definitions | Rural ( | >50 neonates ( |
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| Prospective ( | ≤2 mo ( | Population based with minimal bias ( | Defined illness ( | Wide range of inconsistency of definitions | Rural ( | >50 neonates ( |
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| Prospective ( | ≤2 mo ( | Population based with minimal bias ( | Defined illness ( | Wide range of inconsistency of definitions | Rural ( | >50 neonates ( |
Abbreviations: N/A, not available.
Quality of data regarding care seeking for ill or suspected ill neonates: all included studies.
| Primary Author, Year | Study Design | Population Representativeness: Description of the Study Population | Quality of Definitions: Study Definitions of Illness, Care Seeking, and Type of Health Care | Generalizability: Rural or Urban | Precision: Study Sample Size >50 Neonates? | |
| Prospective or Retrospective | Recall Period | |||||
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| Ahmed, 2001 | Retrospective | 2-mo recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Bhandari, 2002 | Retrospective | 4-mo recall period |
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| Rural | No |
| Mohan, 2008 | Retrospective | 45-d recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Baqui, 2008 | Retrospective | 1-y recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Dongre, 2008 | Retrospective | 1-y recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Dongre, 2009 | Retrospective | 1-y recall period |
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| Peri-urban | Yes |
| Willis, 2009 | Retrospective | 4-wk recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Chowdhury, 2011 | Retrospective | 2- to 6-wk recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
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| Bazzano, 2008 | Retrospective | 4-wk recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Manji, 2009 | Retrospective | N/A |
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| Urban/rural | N/A |
| Waiswa, 2010 | Retrospective | 4- to 6-wk recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
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| Manandhar, 2004 | Prospective | N/A |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Kumar, 2008 | Prospective | 3-y recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| McPherson, 2006 | Prospective | 1-y recall period |
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| Rural | N/A |
| Dongre, 2009 | Prospective | 1-y recall period |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Azad, 2010 | Prospective | 6 wk after delivery |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Darmstadt 2010 | Prospective | CHWs assessed neonates on days 2, 5, and 8 |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Tripathy, 2010 | Prospective | 6 wk after delivery |
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| Rural | Yes |
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| Awasthi, 2006 | Retrospective | Caregivers and CHWs who cared for a seriously ill neonate in past year and/or experienced a neonatal death or near death in past 2 y |
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| Rural | Yes |
| Awasthi, 2008 | Retrospective | 6 wk±15 d after recruitment |
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| Urban | Yes |
| Awasthi, 2009 | Prospective | 6–8 wk after recruitment |
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| Urban | Yes |
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| Ogunlesi, 2011 | Prospective | No recall period; neonates assessed at time of admission |
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| Urban | Yes |
Abbreviations: CHW, community health worker; GP, government provider; IMNCI, integrated management of childhood and neonatal illnesses, NGC, nongovernmental consultants; NGD, nongovernmental dispensers; N/A, not available; PHC, primary health care; SHC, secondary health care; TH, traditional healer.
Community-based studies that describe type of care sought for ill or suspected ill neonates.
| Primary Author, Year | Neonates with Illness/Suspected Illness ( |
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| Health Care Facility | Health Care Provider | Home Care | No Care | |||||
| Secondary Health Center | Primary Health Center | Pharmacy | Medically Trained Provider | Unqualified Provider | ||||
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| Ahmed, 2001 | 740 | 37 (4%) | 89 (12%) | 607 (82%) | 96 (13%) | |||
| Bhandari, 2002 | 9 | 2 (22%) | ||||||
| Mohan, 2008 | 202 | 24 (12%) | 8 (4%) | 12 (12%) | 139 (69%) | |||
| Baqui, 2008 | 1226 | 498 (41%) | ||||||
| Dongre, 2008 | 321 | 56 (17%) | ||||||
| Dongre, 2009 | 27 | 27 (100%) | 1 (1%) | |||||
| Willis, 2009 | 158 | 62 (39%) | 58 (37%) | |||||
| Chowdhury, 2011 | 365 | 2 (1%) | 136 (37%) | 90 (25%) | 137 (38%) | |||
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| Bazzano, 2008 | 59 | 23 (39%) | 13 (22%) | 23 (39%) | ||||
| Manji, 2009 | N/A | N/A (83%) | N/A (1%) | N/A (16%) | ||||
| Waiswa, 2010 | 6 | 4 (66%) | 2 (33%) | |||||
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| Manandhar, 2004 |
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| Kumar, 2008 |
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| Dongre, 2009 |
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| Darmstadt, 2010 | C Base: 812; C End: 400; I Base: 733; I End: 1050 |
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Percentage reported as a proportion of all neonates with an illness or suspected illness that were included in each study. Multiple responses regarding type of care sought were permitted, as described by included studies.
Abbreviations: C, control; ENC, essential newborn care; ENCT, essential newborn care plus thermostat; I, intervention; N/A, not available.
Figure 2Defining care seeking conceptually.
CHW, community health worker; PHC, primary health care; SHC, secondary health care.