| Literature DB >> 33052981 |
Maria Bhura1, Shabina Ariff2, Shamim Ahmad Qazi3, Zaitoon Qazi4, Imran Ahmed1, Yasir Bin Nisar5, Zamir Suhag6, Abdul Wahab Soomro6, Sajid Bashir Soofi1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) launched a guideline in 2015 for managing Possible Serious Bacterial Infection (PSBI) when referral is not feasible in young infants aged 0-59 days. This guideline was implemented across 303 Basic Health Unit (BHU) Plus primary health care (PHC) facilities in peri-urban and rural settings of Sindh, Pakistan. We evaluated the implementation of PSBI guideline, and the quality of care provided to sick young infants at these facilities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33052981 PMCID: PMC7556471 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0240688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
PSBI classification list.
| PSBI Classification | Signs and Symptoms | Management/Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Critical Illness | Having at least one sign of the following: convulsions, unable to feed at all, does not move even on stimulation, unable to cry at all, cyanosis, bulging fontanelle | Referral for hospitalization after pre-referral treatment (one dose of benzyl penicillin 50 000 IU/kg and gentamicin 5–7.5mg/kg) |
| Clinical Severe Infection | Having at least one sign of severe infection (i.e. movement only when stimulated, stopped feeding well on observation, temperature ≥ 38°C or ≤ 35.5°C, 0–6 days old infant with respiratory rate of ≥ 60 breaths per minute or severe chest in-drawing). | Referral for hospitalization after pre-referral treatment. If refused, give intramuscular gentamicin 5–7.5 mg/kg once daily for two days and twice daily oral amoxicillin, 50 mg/kg per dose for seven days |
| Pneumonia | 7–59 days old infant with respiratory rate of ≥ 60 breaths per minute | Oral amoxicillin, 50 mg/kg per dose twice daily for seven days |
PSBI classifications with their associated signs/symptoms and the required management/treatment in infants aged 0–59 days. Adapted from ([10])
Indicators for health system support, availability of commodities and referral mechanism at health facilities (n = 30).
| Health facility indicators | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Health facilities that received at least one supervisory visit including observation of case management during the previous six months | 21 (70%) |
| Health facilities with at least one health worker trained in management of young infants with PSBI | 30 (100%) |
| Health facilities with a stockout of medicines in the past one month | 5 (16.7%) |
| Health facilities with a stockout of medicines in the past three months | 6 (20%) |
| Health facilities where staff held meetings to discuss PSBI cases | 28 (93.3%) |
| Health facilities where lady health workers referred infants | 24 (80%) |
| Health facilities that referred PSBI cases to other higher-level facilities | 25 (83.3%) |
| Health facilities that referred a PSBI case in the month prior to the survey | 20 (66.7%) |
| Health facilities with a PSBI case classification registry | 25 (83.3%) |
| Oral amoxicillin | 30 (100%) |
| Injectable gentamicin | 30 (100%) |
| Thermometers | 30 (100%) |
| Weighing scale | 30 (100%) |
| Respiratory timer | 30 (100%) |
| Disposable syringes and needles | 29 (96.7%) |
| Antiseptic swabs | 28 (93.3%) |
| IMCI chart booklet/PSBI job aid | 28 (93.3%) |
| Ambulance service | 18 (60%) |
Descriptive characteristics of HCPs (n = 42) and PSBI cases at health facilities (n = 30).
| Characteristics | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Medical physicians | 40 (95.2%) |
| Other HCPs | 2 (4.8%) |
| <6 months | 2 (4.8%) |
| 6-<12 months | 17 (40.5%) |
| 12-<24 months | 18 (42.9%) |
| 24+ months | 5 (11.9%) |
| 0–10 | 5 (16.7%) |
| 11–20 | 6 (20%) |
| 21–50 | 12 (40%) |
| 51–100 | 4 (13.3%) |
| 100+ | 3 (10%) |
| None | 4 (13.3%) |
| 1–10 | 11 (36.7%) |
| 11–20 | 5 (16.7%) |
| 21–50 | 9 (30%) |
| >50 | 1 (3.3%) |
| 26 | |
| Number of health facilities where sick young infants were brought on the day of the survey | 18 (60%) |
Fig 1Assessment of sick young infants by health care providers for PSBI danger signs (n = 26).
Fig 2Identification of PSBI in infants aged 0–59 days by the HCP and on re-examination by surveyor (n = 26).
Fig 3Average scores in percent for health care providers (n = 40) assessment through 78 case scenarios across PSBI management categories.
Fig 4Caretakers’ understanding of danger signs (n = 26).