Erchick Daniel J, Lackner Johanna B, Mullany Luke C, Bhandari Nitin N, Shedain Purusotam R, Khanal Sirjana, Dhakwa Jyoti R, Katz Joanne
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Avant Medical Communications Group, Aptos, CA, USA.
Arch Public Health. 2022 Jan 11;80(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s13690-021-00771-5.
In Nepal, neonatal mortality fell substantially between 2000 and 2018, decreasing 50% from 40 to 20 deaths per 1,000 live births. Nepal's success has been attributed to a decreasing total fertility rate, improvements in female education, increases in coverage of skilled care at birth, and community-based child survival interventions.
A verbal autopsy study, led by the Integrated Rural Health Development Training Centre (IRHDTC), conducted interviews for 338 neonatal deaths across six districts in Nepal between April 2012 and April 2013. We conducted a secondary analysis of verbal autopsy data to understand how cause and age of neonatal death are related to health behaviors, care seeking practices, and coverage of essential services in Nepal.
Sepsis was the leading cause of neonatal death (n=159/338, 47.0%), followed by birth asphyxia (n=56/338, 16.6%), preterm birth (n=45/338, 13.3%), and low birth weight (n=17/338, 5.0%). Neonatal deaths occurred primarily on the first day of life (27.2%) and between days 1 and 6 (64.8%) of life. Risk of death due birth asphyxia relative to sepsis was higher among mothers who were nulligravida, had <4 antenatal care visits, and had a multiple birth; risk of death due to prematurity relative to sepsis was lower for women who made ≥1 delivery preparation and higher for women with a multiple birth.
Our findings suggest cause and age of death distributions typically associated with high mortality settings. Increased coverage of preventive antenatal care interventions and counseling are critically needed. Delays in care seeking for newborn illness and quality of care around the time of delivery and for sick newborns are important points of intervention with potential to reduce deaths, particularly for birth asphyxia and sepsis, which remain common in this population.
在尼泊尔,2000年至2018年间新生儿死亡率大幅下降,每1000例活产儿的死亡数从40例降至20例,降幅达50%。尼泊尔取得这一成功归因于总生育率下降、女性教育水平提高、出生时熟练护理覆盖率增加以及基于社区的儿童生存干预措施。
由综合农村卫生发展培训中心(IRHDTC)牵头的一项口头尸检研究,于2012年4月至2013年4月期间对尼泊尔六个地区的338例新生儿死亡病例进行了访谈。我们对口头尸检数据进行了二次分析,以了解尼泊尔新生儿死亡原因和年龄与健康行为、就医行为以及基本服务覆盖率之间的关系。
败血症是新生儿死亡的主要原因(n = 159/338,47.0%),其次是出生窒息(n = 56/338,16.6%)、早产(n = 45/338,13.3%)和低出生体重(n = 17/338,5.0%)。新生儿死亡主要发生在出生第一天(27.2%)以及出生后第1天至第6天(64.8%)。相对于败血症,初产妇、产前检查次数少于4次以及多胎妊娠的母亲因出生窒息导致的死亡风险更高;相对于败血症,进行过≥1次分娩准备的女性因早产导致的死亡风险较低,而多胎妊娠的女性因早产导致的死亡风险较高。
我们的研究结果表明死亡原因和年龄分布通常与高死亡率环境相关。迫切需要增加预防性产前护理干预措施和咨询服务的覆盖率。新生儿患病后就医延迟以及分娩时和患病新生儿护理的质量是重要的干预点,有可能降低死亡率,特别是对于出生窒息和败血症,这两种情况在该人群中仍然很常见。