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A team of U.S. researchers
has devised a training program for midwives, nurses,
doctors, and birth attendants that can save one in every
three babies from a stillbirth.
The training includes simple techniques of helping the
newborn start breathing and keeping it snug and clean
can help in slashing the increasing rate of stillbirths
in developing and poor countries of the world.
Dr Waldemar Carlo and his contemporaries from the
Division of Neonatology from the University of Alabama
at Birmingham initiated the present study that was
funded by grants from the U.S. National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development and the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation.
“Approximately 38 percent of deaths among children
younger than 5 years of age occur during the first 28
days of life, and 75 percent of the neonatal deaths
occur within the first seven days,” informs lead author,
Dr Waldemar Carlo.
Study methods- The research team carried out the
Essential Newborn Care training, a three day program
that taught the local health workers how to prevent
stillbirths at the neonatal stage. These workers further
taught the technique to their co-workers. In all, 3600
health workers received the training.
A total of 1,20,000 births were tracked by the
researchers from Argentina, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Guatemala, India, Pakistan, and Zambia.
The study found that the rate of stillbirths decreased
by more than 30 percent after the program.
The researchers reported that the stillbirths declined
to 16 per every 1000 cases from 23 per 1000 cases.
Dr Carlo says, “This is a very large reduction in
mortality. The reduction in stillbirth is extremely
encouraging. We think this is a major breakthrough
because up to now it had been thought it would be
extremely difficult to train so many healthcare
providers.”
“If implemented worldwide, such an intervention could
markedly reduce prenatal mortality,” he adds.
Breakthrough findings - Experts believe that many babies
do not automatically start breathing at birth and they
need a stimulation to take a breath.
Some breathe after their back is rubbed or when sole of
the feet is tapped while others need air pumps that can
push air into their lungs.
The study found that chances of a stillbirth decreased
when the delivery was handled by trained attendants.
Dr Alan E Guttmacher, acting director of the Eunice
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development (NICHD) states, “These findings
suggest that a low-cost instructional regimen for birth
attendants can be effective in reducing stillbirths in
parts of the world where most births are not attended by
a physician,”
The research was documented in the New England Journal
of Medicine with the title, ‘Newborn-Care Training and
Prenatal Mortality in Developing Countries’.
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