Successful Outcomes Of An Infant Sickle Cell Clinic In Luanda, Angola

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2934-2934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick T. McGann ◽  
Margarida Muhongo ◽  
Elizabeth McGann ◽  
Vysolela de Oliveira ◽  
Brigida Santos ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is a significant, under recognized contributor to global childhood mortality, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Early diagnosis is critical to enable timely access to care and education, before severe and life-threatening complications develop in the first year of life. Unfortunately, such early and comprehensive care remains largely unavailable for many infants across Africa. In an attempt to reduce the high early mortality associated with SCA, an infant SCA clinic was developed and implemented in the capital city of Luanda, Angola. We describe the early experiences and successful outcomes for infants enrolled in this clinic. Methods Infants were enrolled in the clinic if the diagnosis of SCA was made in the first year of life. The clinic was established in the major public pediatric hospital in Angola, Hospital Pediátrico David Bernardino (HPDB). The vast majority of enrolled infants were diagnosed by newborn screening at local maternity hospitals, while some were diagnosed due to clinical suspicion or known family history. Initial clinic visit included intake of demographics such as contact information, family history, and details of basic housing conditions. A dried bloodspot was collected and the diagnosis of SCA was confirmed by isoelectric focusing. All families received sickle cell education and confirmed infants received penicillin prophylaxis (125 mg by mouth twice per day), pneumococcal vaccination series (Prevnar-13), and an insecticide-treated mosquito net for malaria prophylaxis. Results In the first twenty months of the HPDP Infant SCA clinic, 301 infants were enrolled. Eighty-one percent (244/301) were identified through the associated newborn screening program, while the remaining fifty-seven infants presented due to clinical symptoms or known family history. Families live in the urban and poverty-stricken Luanda. The average household has 6.4 people with 2.8 people per bedroom. Only 34.2% of families reported access to water within their household. Despite poverty and difficult housing situations, continued follow-up was extraordinarily high at 97.3%. After the initial visit, only eight families (2.7%) chose not to follow-up – four preferred faith or traditional healing techniques, and four chose follow-up care at a private clinic. With a concentrated effort to track and enable timely follow-up care, there were zero babies truly “lost to follow-up.” For the 167 babies who are now at least one year of age, the calculated infant mortality rate (under 1 year of age) is 6.6%, which compares favorably to the nationally reported infant mortality rate for all children (9.8%). Upon reviewing the 11 deaths, in nearly all cases the families sought appropriate medical care as instructed, and most deaths were likely preventable if appropriate and timely emergency care were available in the community. Conclusions Early mortality associated with SCA can be significantly reduced through early diagnosis and access to care and education, even in countries with few health resources such as Angola. These experiences with a newborn clinic in the urban city of Luanda demonstrate that simple, lifesaving care is feasible and that follow-up and survival is excellent. Although the survival in this Angolan cohort was even better than the national infant mortality rate, the few deaths illustrate gaps in the understanding of emergency SCA care among the healthcare community. It is critical to include education and training of healthcare professionals at all levels of care in any national strategy, so that children with SCA can be promptly triaged and adequately treated for emergent and life-threatening complications. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 800-800
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

The infant mortality rate for a single New England town for the years 1782 and 1783 cannot be used as a true index of this statistic for the 13 states which made up the United States during the 1780's. As we lack data concerning infant mortality for the country as a whole during this period, information about the mortality of infants in the town of Salem, Massachusetts, where all births were recorded, should be of interest to pediatricians. Doctor Edward A. Holyoke of Salem in a letter to Mr. Caleb Garnett, the Recording Secretary of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, gave these figures for the town of Salem: In 1782 there were 311 live-born infants and of these 36 died before they reached their first birthday, for an infant mortality rate of 115. In 1783 of 374 live-born infants, 38 died during their first year of life, for an infant mortality of 102. When one recalls that the rate for 1915 in the United States was 100, the infants, at least in Salem, did not fare too badly.


2021 ◽  
pp. 6-14
Author(s):  
Yu.G. Antipkin ◽  
◽  
R.V. Marushko ◽  
E.A. Dudina ◽  
◽  
...  

Over the past decades in Ukraine, the unfavorable indicators of population reproduction, the state of health of women and children, acquired in the previous period, have become persistent, one of the integrative indicators of which is the mortality of children under one year of age. The infant mortality rate is a sensitive indicator of the general sanitary and socio$economic well-being of the country, a strategic indicator of the health and survival of children, the level and quality of medical and social care, and the effectiveness of obstetric and pediatric services. Purpose — to study, analyze and determine the general and regional features of the state and dynamics of infant mortality and its components in Ukraine. Materials and methods. A retrospective analysis and assessment of the dynamics of infant mortality in Ukraine for the period 1990–2019 was carried out in the context of regions and separate states according to state and industry statistics, perinatal audit for the methodology of the WHO «MATRIX-BABIES». Methods of a systematic approach, statistical, graphic representation are applied. Results. The study found that the unfavorable demographic situation in Ukraine is accompanied by a still high, with a positive trend, the mortality rate of children in the first year of life — 12.8‰ in 1990, and 7.0‰ in 2019 (loss rate — 30.9%), a direct dependence of infant mortality rates on indicators of total fertility (r=0.340) and morbidity in children in the first year of life (r=0.888) was found with an excess of mortality under 1 year in boys compared with girls (OR with 95% CI 1.1 (1.0–1.2). Infant mortality rates are relatively low, below the average for Ukraine, in Vinnitsa, Volyn, Kyiv, Lviv, Poltava, Ternopil, Khmelnitsky regions and City Kyiv, and above average — in Dnepropetrovsk, Donetsk, Transcarpathian, Kharkiv regions. The decrease in the overall infant mortality rate was due to the positive dynamics of all its components — early neonatal (5.8‰ in 1990, 3.04‰ in 2019), neonatal (7.3‰, 4.57‰) and postneonatal mortality (5.7‰, 2.52‰, respectively) with a more intensive decrease in postneonatal mortality (rate of decline — 55.8%). However, there are doubts that the registered data on neonatal mortality, as well as on infant mortality in general, are real, since according to the perinatal audit data, the «MATRIX-BABIES» method revealed an underestimation of early neonatal mortality — an underestimation of its real level in general by 2.1–2.3 times. It is shown that the infant mortality rate has decreased from all the main causes of mortality with a more accelerated rate of decrease in infant losses from exogenous, manageable causes — respiratory diseases (rate of decline — 83.7%), infectious and parasitic diseases (rate of decline — 80.7%). At the same time, the key causes of mortality in children under 1 year of age throughout the entire observation period remain separate conditions that arise in the perinatal period (52.8–38.4 per 10,000 live births) and congenital malformations, deformities, and chromosomal abnormalities (38,6–17.2 per 10,000 live births). It was found that against the background of a decrease in infant losses in the structure of infant mortality by 43.2%, the part of mortality from certain conditions of the perinatal period increased with a significant decrease in the part of losses from exogenous causes of death — respiratory diseases by 66.7%, some infectious and parasitic diseases by 57.8%. Conclusions. In general, despite the positive dynamics of all components of infant mortality, its level characterizes a pronounced lag behind developed countries, and according to the rating of the countries of the world as of 2018, Ukraine ranks 61st among 193 countries of the world and administrative territories without state status. The research was carried out in accordance with the principles of the Helsinki Declaration. The study protocol was approved by the Local Ethics Committee of these Institutes. The informed consent of the patient was obtained for conducting the studies. No conflict of interest was declared by the authors. Key words: infant mortality, morbidity, newborns, children in the first year of life.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Alexander ◽  
Leslie Root

In recent decades, the relationship between the average length of life for those who die in the first year of life — the lifetable quantity 1𝑎0 — and the level of infant mortality, on which its calculation is often based, has broken down. The very low levels of infant mortality in the developed world correspond to a range of 1𝑎0 quantities. We illustrate the competing effect of falling mortality and reduction in preterm births on 1𝑎0, through two populations with very different levels of premature birth — infants born to non-Hispanic white mothers and to non- Hispanic black mothers in the United States. Through simulation, we further demonstrate that falling mortality reduces 1𝑎0, while a reduction in premature births increases it. We use these observations to motivate the formulation of a new approximation formula for 1𝑎0 in low- mortality contexts, which is a function of both the infant mortality rate and the ratio of infant to under-five mortality. Model results and validation show that this model outperforms existing alternatives.


2006 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 240-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karina Giane Mendes ◽  
Maria Teresa Anselmo Olinto ◽  
Juvenal Soares Dias da Costa

OBJECTIVE: To identify risk factors associated with infant mortality and, more specifically, with neonatal mortality. METHODS: A case-control study was carried out in the municipality of Caxias do Sul, Southern Brazil. Characteristics of prenatal care and causes of mortality were assessed for all live births in the 2001-2002 period with a completed live-birth certificate and whose mothers lived in the municipality. Cases were defined as all deaths within the first year of life. As controls, there were selected the two children born immediately after each case in the same hospital, who were of the same sex, and did not die within their first year of life. Multivariate analysis was performed using conditional logistic regression. RESULTS: There was a reduction in infant mortality, the greatest reduction was observed in the post-neonatal period. The variables gestational age (<36 weeks), birth weight (<2,500 g), and 5-minute Apgar (<6) remained in the final model of the multivariate analysis, after adjustment. CONCLUSIONS: Perinatal conditions comprise almost the totality of neonatal deaths, and the majority of deaths occur at delivery. The challenge for reducing infant mortality rate in the city is to reduce the mortality by perinatal conditions in the neonatal period.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 1155-1160
Author(s):  

Why Is Infant Mortality Important? Rates of infant mortality are sensitive indicators of a broad range of factors affecting children's health. As such, infant mortality is the "tip of the iceberg" of child health problems, and changes in infant mortality are a signal of factors affecting child health more broadly. In addition to its role as a general gauge of child health, infant mortality itself represents an important health problem. It is well to remember that infant death rates are the highest of any age group less than 65 years. The message conveyed by infant mortality rates if better understood in terms of the causes of mortality at different times during the first year of life. Neonatal Mortality Neonatal mortality rate is defined as the number of infants dying between 0 and 27 days of life per 1,000 live births. These deaths in the first month of life reflect primarily factors associated with health of the mother before and during pregnancy and the special problems of the newborn. Deaths in this age range result chiefly from inadequate intruterine growth (prematurity, intrauterine growth retardation) and congenital anomalies. As a result, neonatal mortality rates provide an indicator of the factors affecting pregnancy, delivery, and the neonate and the adequacy of services in the prenatal, intrapartum, and neonatal periods. Postneonatal Mortality Postneonatal mortality rate is defined as the number of infants dying between 28 days and 11 months of life per 1,000 live births, ie, deaths occurring during the remainder of the first year of life.


1986 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard H. Steckel

Mortality rates in early childhood are widely regarded as a sensitive index of the health and living standards of a population (United Nations, 1973: 138-139; Williamson, 1981; Haines, 1985). The debate over the health and treatment of American slaves has led scholars to investigate various data and methods to construct these measures. Early work based on plantation records placed the infant mortality rate (the proportion of live births that die within one year of birth) at 152.6 per thousand (Postell, 1951: 158). Using census data and indirect techniques, estimates of the infant mortality rate climbed from 182.7 per thousand by Evans (1962: 212) to 274 to 302 per thousand by Farley (1970: 33) and 246 to 275 per thousand by Eblen (1972; 1974). Recent work based on height data and indirect techniques places the infant mortality rate in the neighborhood of 350 per thousand and total losses before the end of the first year (stillbirths plus infant deaths) at nearly 50% (Steckel, 1986a). Thus, measurements over the past four decades have gravitated toward the judgment of southern planter Thomas Afflick (1851: 435) who wrote, “Of those born, one half die under one year.”


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 777-781
Author(s):  
Marion Johnson Chabot ◽  
Joseph Garfinkel ◽  
Margaret W. Pratt

This study analyzes infant deaths in the United States, 1962 to 1967, by place of residence, to determine to what degree variations in age at death are related to degree of urbanization and race. Results of the study indicate that: (1) after one day of life infant mortality increases progressively as degree of urbanization decreases; (2) the differences between urban and rural death rates are greatest in the posthebdomadal (1 week or older) period; (3) in all age groups at all levels of urbanization, the nonwhite infant is at a marked disadvantage relative to the white infant; (4) the older the infant, the greater the disadvantage for nonwhite infants in rural areas; (5) had the white infant mortality rate prevailed among the nonwhite population over the six-year period from 1962 to 1967 an estimated annual total of 11,597 nonwhite infants would have survived their first year of life; (6) 40% of the excess deaths are in infants under 7 days and 60% in the posthebdomadal period; (7) fetal death rates increase progressively as degree of urbanization decreases, complementing a direct relationship between under 1 day mortality and urbanization resulting in a level trend for perinatal mortality.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1108-1108
Author(s):  
Myron E. Wegman

Dr. Brewer has apparently confused the term perinatal mortality rate, usually defined as the number of fetal deaths during the first week before delivery plus the neonatal deaths during the first week after delivery, per 1,000 live births, with infant mortality, deaths of live born infants during the first year of life, per 1,000 live births.: Both rates have considerable importance and utility but they are quite different. The National Center for Health Statistics has validated the general reliability of the 10% sample as reflecting very closely the final and correct data, which are usually not available until one or two years later.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 835-842
Author(s):  
Myron E. Wegman

Continued decrease in infant mortality and relative stability in the other major indices highlight 1978 vital data (Table 1)2. The provisional infant mortality rate of 13.6 deaths in the first year of life per 1,000 live births set a new record, 3.5% below the final rate of 14.1 in 1977. Births in 1978 were slightly higher in number but, with the natural increase in the population, the birth rate was slightly lower than in 1977. The crude death rate, marriage rate, and divorce rate were all up slightly. BIRTHS Estimated live births in 1978 totaled 3,329,000,2 fractionally higher than the final figure for 1977.


1992 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 433-445
Author(s):  
David Hubacher ◽  
Patricia Bailey ◽  
Barbara Janowitz ◽  
Fidel Barahona ◽  
Marco Pinel

SummaryIn order to determine the validity of infant mortality estimates based on retrospective reporting, the Honduran Ministry of Health carried out a follow-up survey of women interviewed in a 1987 national survey. Women were interviewed approximately 14 months after the baseline survey and were asked about the outcomes of their pregnancies and the survival status of their young children. The overall infant mortality rate calculated from the follow-up survey was lower than that obtained from the baseline survey, due to the particularly low rate among the group of women who were pregnant at the time of the baseline survey. Possible explanations for this low rate are discussed.


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