| Literature DB >> 33004642 |
Ribka Amsalu1,2, Catrin Schulte-Hillen3, Daniel Martinez Garcia4, Nadia Lafferty5, Catherine N Morris6, Stephanie Gee3, Nadia Akseer7, Elaine Scudder6, Samira Sami8, Sammy O Barasa9, Hussein Had10, Maimun Farah Maalim11, Seidou Moluh3, Sara Berkelhamer12.
Abstract
Humanitarian crises, driven by disasters, conflict, and disease epidemics, have profound effects on society, including on people's health and well-being. Occurrences of conflict by state and nonstate actors have increased in the last 2 decades: by the end of 2018, an estimated 41.3 million internally displaced persons and 20.4 million refugees were reported worldwide, representing a 70% increase from 2010. Although public health response for people affected by humanitarian crisis has improved in the last 2 decades, health actors have made insufficient progress in the use of evidence-based interventions to reduce neonatal mortality. Indeed, on average, conflict-affected countries report higher neonatal mortality rates and lower coverage of key maternal and newborn health interventions compared with non-conflict-affected countries. As of 2018, 55.6% of countries with the highest neonatal mortality rate (≥30 per 1000 live births) were affected by conflict and displacement. Systematic use of new evidence-based interventions requires the availability of a skilled health workforce and resources as well as commitment of health actors to implement interventions at scale. A review of the implementation of the Helping Babies Survive training program in 3 refugee responses and protracted conflict settings identify that this training is feasible, acceptable, and effective in improving health worker knowledge and competency and in changing newborn care practices at the primary care and hospital level. Ultimately, to improve neonatal survival, in addition to a trained health workforce, reliable supply and health information system, community engagement, financial support, and leadership with effective coordination, policy, and guidance are required.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33004642 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2020-016915L
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatrics ISSN: 0031-4005 Impact factor: 7.124