| Literature DB >> 26444272 |
Prem K Mony1,2, Krishnamurthy Jayanna3,4, Swarnarekha Bhat5, Suman V Rao6, Maryann Crockett7, Lisa Avery8, B M Ramesh9, Stephen Moses10,11, James Blanchard12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency Neonatal Care (EmNC) is an important service for the health and survival of newborns. The objective of our study was to assess the availability of emergency neonatal care services in the north-eastern region of Karnataka state in India.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26444272 PMCID: PMC4596301 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-015-1126-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Map of the northeastern study districts within Karnataka state, India
Definitions of Essential and Emergency (Basic & Comprehensive) Neonatal Care services (adapted from [9]) and their recommended geographic distribution [8]
| Routine Essential Newborn Care | Emergency Neonatal Care (EmNC) Services | |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Emergency | Comprehensive Emergency Neonatal Care (CEmNC) | |
| 1. Thermal protection | 1. Corticosteroids (in preterm labour) | ✓ all BEmNC |
| 2. Early & exclusive breastfeeding | 2. Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) for small/preterm babies | + |
| 3. Hygienic cord care | 3. Bag-and-mask resuscitation | 6. Neonatal intubation |
| 4. Injectable antibiotics (for mother and newborn) | 7. Intravenous fluids | |
| 5. Alternative feeding (tube/spoon feeding) | 8. Oxygen administration | |
Recommended geographic distribution (minimum): One CEmNC facility & four BEmNC facilities per 500,000 people
Proportion of government and private facilities offering comprehensive or basic emergency newborn care services, northeastern Karnataka, 2010
| Sector | Government | Private | Significance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Service | Categorya |
| Category |
| Z-score; p-value |
| CEmNC | PHC (N = 332) | 0 | 1-6 beds (N = 114) | 8 (7 %) | |
| -- | 1-30 bedsb (N = 40) | 5 (13 %) | |||
| CHC (N =69) | 0 | 7-30 beds (N = 226) | 57 (25 %) | ||
| TH (N = 34) | 0 | 31-50 beds (N = 31) | 15 (48 %) | ||
| DH (N = 8) | 2 (25 %) | >50 beds (N = 11) | 8 (73 %) | ||
|
| 2 (0.5 %) |
| 93(22 %) | 103.2; <0.001 | |
| BEmNC | PHC (N = 332) | 0 | 1-6 beds (N = 114) | 11 (10 %) | |
| -- | 1-30 bedsb (N = 40) | 6 (15 %) | |||
| CHC (N =69) | 6 (9 %) | 7-30 beds (N = 226) | 69 (31 %) | ||
| TH (N = 34) | 4 (12 %) | 31-50 beds (N = 31) | 16 (52 %) | ||
| DH (N = 8) | 5 (63 %) | >50 beds (N = 11) | 8 (73 %) | ||
|
| 15 (3 %) |
| 110 (26 %) | 90.1; <0.001 | |
a DH = District hospital; TH = Taluk hospital; CHC = Community health centre; PHC = primary health centre; CEmNC = Comprehensive Emergency Neonatal Care; BEmNC = Basic Emergency Neonatal Care [all CEmNC facilities are also BEmNC facilities in this table];
bFor 40 private hospitals, the total number of beds was listed as <30 but the exact number could not be ascertained
Fig. 2a. Proportion of ‘small’ health facilities providing basic or comprehensive emergency neonatal care services by sector and district, northeastern Karnataka (2010). b. Proportion of ‘large’ health facilities providing basic or comprehensive emergency newborn care services by sector and district, northeastern Karnataka (2010)
Fig. 3Distribution of emergency newborn care service availability by district, northeastern Karnataka (2010)