Identifying and quantifying initial post-discharge needs for clinical review of sick, newborns in Kenya based on a large multi-site, retrospective cohort study.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Frontiers in Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-09-26 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fped.2024.1374629
John Wainaina, Esther Lee, Grace Irimu, Jalemba Aluvaala, Mike English
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Abstract

Background: Progress in neonatal care has resulted in a 51% decrease in global neonatal mortality rates from 1990 to 2017. Enhanced survival will put pressure on health care systems to provide appropriate post-discharge, follow-up care but the scale of need for such care is poorly defined.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of newborns discharged from 23 public hospital neonatal units (NBUs) in Kenya between January 2018 and June 2023 to identify initial follow-up needs. We first determined pragmatic follow-up categories based on survivors' clinical conditions and morbidities. We then used individual phenotypes of individual babies to assign them to needing one or more forms of specialized clinical follow-up. We use descriptive statistics to estimate proportions of those with specific needs and patterns of need.

Findings: Among 136,249/159,792 (85.3%) neonates discharged, around one-third (33%) were low birth weight (<2,500 g), and a similar 33.4% were preterm (<37 weeks). We estimated 131,351 initial episodes of follow-up would be needed across nine distinct follow-up categories: general pediatrics, nutrition, growth & development (40.4%), auditory screening (38.8%), ophthalmology for retinopathy of prematurity (9.6%), neurology (8.0%), occupational therapy (1.3%), specialized nutrition (0.9%), surgery (0.8%), cardiology (0.2%), and pulmonary (<0.1%). Most neonates met the criteria for two (52.3%, 28,733), followed by three (39.6%, 21,738) and one follow-up episodes (5.6%, 3,098). In addition to prematurity and very low birth weight (≤1,500 g), severe infections with extended gentamicin treatment, severe jaundice managed with phototherapy, and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) contributed substantially to the pattern of need for post-discharge follow-up.

Conclusions: Almost half of surviving NBU infants have multiple specialty post-discharge follow-up needs. More urgent attention needs to be focused on healthcare planning now to guide strategies to address the varied medical and developmental needs that we outline in resource-constrained contexts like Kenya.

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基于一项大型多站点回顾性队列研究,确定并量化肯尼亚患病新生儿出院后临床复查的初始需求。
背景:新生儿护理的进步使得全球新生儿死亡率从 1990 年到 2017 年下降了 51%。存活率的提高将给医疗保健系统带来压力,要求其提供适当的出院后随访护理,但此类护理的需求规模尚不明确:我们对 2018 年 1 月至 2023 年 6 月间从肯尼亚 23 家公立医院新生儿科(NBU)出院的新生儿进行了一项回顾性队列研究,以确定最初的随访需求。我们首先根据幸存者的临床情况和发病率确定了实用的随访类别。然后,我们利用单个婴儿的个体表型将其归类为需要一种或多种形式的专业临床随访。我们使用描述性统计来估算有特定需求者的比例和需求模式:在 136,249/159,792 名(85.3%)出院新生儿中,约三分之一(33%)为低出生体重儿:近一半存活的新生儿在出院后需要多种专科随访。现在需要更加迫切地关注医疗保健规划,以指导相关策略,满足我们在肯尼亚这样资源有限的国家概述的各种医疗和发育需求。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Pediatrics
Frontiers in Pediatrics Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
2132
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Pediatrics (Impact Factor 2.33) publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research broadly across the field, from basic to clinical research that meets ongoing challenges in pediatric patient care and child health. Field Chief Editors Arjan Te Pas at Leiden University and Michael L. Moritz at the Children''s Hospital of Pittsburgh are supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international experts. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide. Frontiers in Pediatrics also features Research Topics, Frontiers special theme-focused issues managed by Guest Associate Editors, addressing important areas in pediatrics. In this fashion, Frontiers serves as an outlet to publish the broadest aspects of pediatrics in both basic and clinical research, including high-quality reviews, case reports, editorials and commentaries related to all aspects of pediatrics.
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