| Literature DB >> 28919246 |
Tina M Slusher1, Louise Tina Day2, Tolulope Ogundele3, Nick Woolfield4, Joshua Aderinsola Owa5.
Abstract
Challenges in treating severe neonatal jaundice in low and middle-income country settings still exist at many levels. These include: a lack of awareness of causes and prevention by families, communities and even sometimes health care professionals; insufficient, ineffective, high quality affordable diagnostic and therapeutic options; limited availability of rehabilitation provision for kernicterus. Collectively these challenges lead to an unacceptably high global morbidity and mortality from severe neonatal jaundice. In the past decade, there has been an explosion of innovations addressing some of these issues and these are increasingly available for scale up. Scientists, healthcare providers, and communities are joining hands to explore educational tools, low cost screening and diagnostic options including at point-of-care and treatment modalities including filtered sunlight and solar powered phototherapy. For the first time, the possibility of eliminating the tragedy of preventable morbidity and mortality from severe NNJ is on the horizon, for all.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostics; Education; Guidelines; Hyperbilirubinaemia; LMIC; Low resource; Neonatal jaundice; Phototherapy; Policy; Screening
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28919246 DOI: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2017.09.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Early Hum Dev ISSN: 0378-3782 Impact factor: 2.079