目前低收入和中等收入国家新生儿维生素K管理的观点和实践。

IF 0.6 Q4 PEDIATRICS Research and reports in neonatology Pub Date : 2018-04-05 DOI:10.2147/RRN.S154652
Patricia S Coffey, Emily Gerth-Guyette
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引用次数: 5

摘要

背景:维生素K预防可以预防维生素K缺乏性出血(VKDB),目前的全球建议支持在新生儿中普遍预防使用维生素K。关于中低收入国家(LMIC)获取和使用维生素K的数据很少。为了解决这一差距,我们探讨了低收入国家新生儿维生素K管理的当前观点和实践,以便更好地了解这种挽救生命的预防性治疗的更广泛覆盖的障碍。方法:我们对参与新生儿健康的利益相关者进行了在线调查。我们通过电子邮件向109名主要来自LMIC的个人发送了调查问卷,收到了23份回复,回复率为21%。答复者一般是来自撒哈拉以南非洲和亚洲的保健或发展专业人员。结果:国家一级的发病率大多未知或没有足够的数据支持。许多答复者(17/23)表示,维生素K预防已列入其国家新生儿护理指南和政策,而12个答复者表示,在出生时给予维生素K已广泛实行。大约一半的答复者报告说,保健工作者接受了诊断和治疗VKDB的培训。最常提到的妨碍更广泛地预防维生素K的障碍是(按顺序排列)家庭出生率高(这就排除了必须由熟练的保健工作者进行注射)、缺乏获得和供应维生素K的机会、认为预防维生素K治疗不是保健工作者的优先事项、缺乏适合婴儿的维生素K配方、文化习俗表明父母不能接受出生时注射维生素K。维生素K未被纳入国家指导方针和政策。对于理想的配方没有达成共识,受访者更喜欢目前的肌内注射和口服配方。总结了已报道的IM和口服制剂的产品属性。结论:新生儿维生素K的预防性管理相对较好地纳入了全球和国家层面的政策,但其实践未得到充分利用。使用的障碍是可及性、供应链物流、提供者态度以及社区一级提供者对注射使用的限制。技术创新可能为减轻这些障碍带来一些希望,尽管宣传和加强卫生系统可能更有可能提高覆盖率。在国家一级进行深入瓶颈分析的进一步调查有助于确定具体的卫生系统改进措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Current perspectives and practices of newborn vitamin K administration in low and middle income countries.

Background: Vitamin K prophylaxis can prevent vitamin K deficiency bleeding (VKDB), and current global recommendations support universal prophylactic use in newborns. Data about access to and use of vitamin K in low and middle income countries (LMIC) are scarce. To address this gap, we explored current perspectives and practices of newborn vitamin K administration in LMIC in order to better understand the barriers to more widespread coverage of this lifesaving preventative treatment.

Methods: We conducted an online survey of stakeholders involved in newborn health. We sent the survey via e-mail to 109 individuals who were based primarily in LMIC and 23 responses were received, resulting in a response rate of 21%. Respondents were generally health or development professionals from sub-Saharan Africa and Asia.

Results: Incidence rates at the country level were mostly unknown or not supported by adequate data. Many respondents (17/23) indicated that vitamin K prophylaxis is included in their national newborn care guidelines and policies, while 12 respondents indicated that administration at birth was widely practiced. Around half of respondents reported that health workers were trained in the diagnosis and treatment of VKDB. The most frequently cited barriers to more widespread vitamin K prophylaxis were (in rank order) high rates of home birth (which preclude injections that must be given by skilled health workers), lack of access to and availability of vitamin K, perception that vitamin K prophylactic treatment is not a priority among health workers, lack of vitamin K formulations appropriate for infants, cultural practices suggesting that injection at birth is not acceptable to parents, and vitamin K not being included in national guidelines and policies. There was no consensus as to the ideal formulation, respondents preferring both the current intramuscular (IM) injection and oral formulation. Reported product attributes of IM and oral formulations are summarized.

Conclusion: Prophylactic administration of vitamin K to newborns is relatively well integrated into policy at the global and country levels, but its practice is underutilized. Barriers to use are access, supply chain logistics, provider attitudes, and restrictions on the use of injections by providers at the community level. Technology innovation may offer some promise to mitigate these barriers, although advocacy and health system strengthening might be more likely to yield improved coverage. Further investigation using in-depth bottleneck analysis at the country level could help identify specific health system improvements.

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