newborns etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
newborns etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

1 Aralık 2016 Perşembe

Fresh hope for Kandahar newborns as Afghan healthcare gets a shot in the arm | Matthew Green

Among the tiniest of the premature babies slumbering in incubators at the Mirwais hospital, one bore a name chosen by hospital staff. At five days old, “Fatima” had been abandoned by her mother after being born so early that her family assumed she was destined for the grave.


Had her relatives grasped the welcome transformation unfolding at the government-run medical centre in Kandahar, the largest city in southern Afghanistan, they might have held their newborn a little tighter.


Where once children crowded three to a bed, single occupancy is now the norm. The number of nurses making the rounds among the rows of infants has doubled, and new incubator units help neonatal specialists nurture the most fragile of lives through their first, vulnerable days.


While much of the news from southern Afghanistan over the past year has been dominated by reports of Taliban advances, the creation of a new paediatric unit at Mirwais hospital has opened a new front in a different campaign: the struggle to reduce extremely high mortality rates among Afghan infants.


Luis Tello, a Spanish paediatrician seconded to the unit by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said the expanded facilities had already helped to persuade more Afghan mothers that, with the right care, even the weakest babies might survive.


“For me, the most astonishing improvement is with [premature] newborns. Before, nobody was taking care of them,” said Tello, speaking in a ward where young children lay on crisp white sheets, mothers at their bedsides. “But we’ve managed to change people’s minds.”


The new unit, which opened in September, is housed in a former nursing clinic in the hospital grounds, converted in a year-long project funded by the ICRC. It has 186 beds, including 15 for mothers – twice the number in the old paediatric wing.


The number of incubators has risen from six to 10, while another new ward caters for children suffering from thalassemia, a hereditary, incurable blood disease prevalent in southern Afghanistan that can be ameliorated with transfusions and medication.


By reducing overcrowding, the unit has dramatically cut the risk of contagious diseases skipping between patients. Staff who might previously have had to discharge barely improved infants to make room for even sicker children can now allow everyone time to recover.


“We won’t force them to go home early,” said Dr Muhammad Sidiq, the unit’s director. “We can let them stay here until they are completely cured.”


The unit is a tangible sign of broader progress in improving infant and maternal health. In contrast to the bleak picture on the battlefield in much of Afghanistan, years of painstaking efforts by the government and donors to improve access to basic healthcare, and train community midwives to assist at births – the vast majority of which take place at home – are yielding significant results.




I’m better off than some people – they’ve lost both their legs and arms


Abdul Matin, 22, student


In 2000, Afghanistan had one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world, with almost 10% of babies dying before their first birthday, according to UN data. Since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001, the picture has changed.


According to a comprehensive health and demographic survey, published by the Afghan government in May, the nationwide mortality rate for all infants fell from 66 to 45 deaths for every 1,000 live births between 2001 and 2015. Similarly, for all children under five, the death rate per 1,000 fell to 55 from 87.


Despite these achievements, infant mortality rates still remain high in many areas, partly due to a lack of basic education about the importance of hygiene during births. Tello explained that deadly sepsis infections could result from the common practice of using a knife to cut an umbilical cord on the sole of a shoe.


Beyond Mirwais, meanwhile, large numbers of rural women have no access to even basic clinics. Some of the mothers arriving at the unit with infants swaddled in shawls had travelled hundreds of kilometres from remote areas. Escalating violence in many parts of Afghanistan has also made facilities harder to reach: a UN study published in April documented reports of 125 security incidents affecting access to healthcare in 2015, compared with 59 in 2014 and 33 in 2013.


While the fighting begins to intensify each spring in Afghanistan, paediatric illness also follows a seasonal cycle, with diarrhoea more common in the summer and pneumonia and other respiratory diseases rife in winter. Doctors have witnessed a marked increase in malnutrition this year, possibly tied to the increasing numbers of people uprooted by fighting in the south. Some of the victims have been brought to a new therapeutic feeding centre in the unit for the most severely underweight.


Making a brisk round of the new wards, checking on patients and issuing rapid-fire instructions to nurses wearing gowns and surgical masks, Tello soon encountered one of the deadliest killers. Holding up a chest x-ray from a tiny boy named Hekmatullah, he scrutinised an image of a ribcage dotted with hundreds of tiny lesions – telltale signs of miliary tuberculosis.


“He’s lucky because he has this x-ray, which is very clear for TB,” Tello said, before hurrying to the next ward, where another listless child was battling pneumococcal meningitis.


That such children can even reach Mirwais hospital reflects the shifting contours of the war in the south. At the height of the US troop surge in Afghanistan in 2010 and 2011, intense fighting in Kandahar province flooded wards and corridors with casualties bearing blast and gunshot wounds. As the vast majority of western forces withdrew ahead of a security handover in 2014, the locus of the conflict in the south shifted into neighbouring Helmand and Uruzgan provinces, which continue to provide the hospital with a steady stream of war-wounded.


In the main hospital, a 22-year-old student named Abdul Matin was undergoing treatment after losing his right arm when a mortar round crashed into his family home in the district of Marjah in Helmand province a month earlier. Sitting up in a bed near other patients lying swaddled in bandages concealing even more grievous wounds, he greeted his injury with a certain degree of resignation.


“This is the situation,” he said. “I’m better off than some people – they’ve lost both their legs and arms.”


Despite the overwhelming challenges many patients face, Tello and his colleagues are starting to offer hope for sick children that many families might once have imagined possible. Though young “Fatima” did not survive, many more Afghans may one day look back and thank the staff at Mirwais hospital for giving them a second chance when they were most in need of help.



Fresh hope for Kandahar newborns as Afghan healthcare gets a shot in the arm | Matthew Green

20 Kasım 2016 Pazar

Baby bracelet aims to save newborns in India from hypothermia

At the upmarket Cloudnine hospital in Gurgaon, the latest accessory among parents is a temperature-taking bracelet for newborns.


The bracelets, made by Bangalore-based startup Bempu, constantly monitor a baby’s temperature and sound an alert if it goes too high or too low. Doctors use the bracelets while babies are in neonatal intensive care or prescribe them for babies being discharged.


“New mothers are very worried about whether their babies are too warm or too cold,” says Dr Sanjay Wazir, director of the neonatal intensive care unit at the hospital. “[The bracelets] are better than a thermometer because they are continuously monitoring the baby’s temperature.”


In India, 8 million prematurely-born underweight babies every year are at high risk of developing hypothermia, where body temperatures fall below 36.5C, which contributes to fatal conditions such as asphyxia, sepsis and pneumonia. India has the highest number of infant deaths caused by premature birth, most of which could be prevented. Maintaining a newborn’s body temperature is critical to its survival.



Baby in Gudalur wearing a Bempu bracelet.


Baby in Gudalur wearing a Bempu bracelet. Photograph: Bempu

Bempu is currently running a pilot scheme in the desert state of Rajasthan, funded by health foundation WISH, which aims to make its bracelets a staple free handout for all babies discharged early from government hospitals.


The chaos of government hospitals can lead to oversights when monitoring newborns’ temperatures, says Gini Morgan, head of public health at Bempu, which has benefitted from grants from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, USAid, UK Aid and other agencies.


“The beds are always filled, the entire family is in the waiting room every day, there are often three babies in one incubator, where there should be only one. There’s a lack of staff, the nurses are overworked, running around with competing priorities. In all that, its hard to manage all these high-risk babies.”


Many hospitals discharge babies early to free up cots, or because parents need to return to remote villages and cannot afford to wait for long periods at the hospital. “Parents travel to district hospitals and they need to get back home,” Morgan explains. “Every day that they’re away from work, they’re missing a pay check.”


Once home, parents are less likely to notice symptoms of hypothermia or have adequate information about how to keep babies warm. Half the world’s newborn babies die at home, almost all of those who die are in developing countries. Hypothermia is one of the leading contributors to these deaths. Fortunately Bempu bracelets are powered by a battery that runs for a month, the critical period for newborns.



Baby wearing Bempu bracelet

Bempu bracelets are powered by a battery that runs for a month, the critical period for newborns. Photograph: Bempu

“It’s not the same as using a thermometer because the device is constantly monitoring the baby’s temperature. Say you take the baby’s temperature now, it can fall after 30 minutes, and you may not notice,” says Dr Wazir, who hopes a crowdfunding campaign will help supply Bempu bracelets to underprivileged mothers at his Premature Babies Foundation, ahead of the winter months, when the risk of hypothermia rises.


But the bracelets alone are not enough, says Dr Vishnu Bhat from the Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research in Pondicherry, who conducted an independent study of their accuracy, the results of which are yet to be published. “We found that the nurses were taking temperatures more accurately than the Bempu bracelets. But the bracelets were good, we found they gave an accurate temperature reading between 85-90% of the time,” he said.


“The bracelets would be useful to mothers who live far from the hospital, the alarm system provides a warning to the mother that the baby is unwell. It would also be good in postnatal wards where nurses are in short supply. But of course, the temperature is not the only issue, mothers need to be trained, they need to be told what to do if the temperature is too low or too high,” he said.



Baby bracelet aims to save newborns in India from hypothermia

25 Haziran 2014 Çarşamba

Newborns "should become organ donors"

Latifa Patel, a trainee paediatrician functioning in the North West, raised the situation at the British Health-related Association conference in Harrogate.


She said it was very likely that an organ donor could have been found if the guidelines in Britain had permitted donation from infants under two months of age.


“We do not like to believe about younger infants obtaining ill or dying but it occurs each day.


“And tiny babies require small organs. Making it possible for babies to have their organs donated would give one more youthful infant a possibility.”


She said mothers and fathers whose infants have died have requested their organs be used but have to be turned down.


“It is a non-contentious problem, but it will consider time, effort and a good deal of perform to update the guidelines,” Dr Patel explained.



Newborns "should become organ donors"

11 Mayıs 2014 Pazar

Mothers informed, stick to soap and water with newborns

Louise Silverton, RCM deputy basic secretary explained: “Parents of newborns do need to consider care but people can go as well far with an obsession with cleanliness. Issues like hand washing before feeding and after nappy changing washing clothing at the appropriate temperature retaining infants away from pets and from guests with infections are all important. But when it comes to washing, soap and water is enough – there is really no want for mother and father to be using antibacterial wipes which can avert the baby’s normal immunity from building.”


In accordance to the “hygiene hypothesis”, some germ publicity is needed to prime the establishing immune technique and hold it under manage.


The concept suggests that when publicity to parasites, bacteria and viruses is constrained early in lifestyle children face a better chance of getting allergies, asthma, and other autoimmune conditions during adulthood.


Earlier research have located that youngsters with older siblings, individuals who grew up on a farm, or who attended day care early in lifestyle, seem to show lower rates of allergies than those whose early childhood was a lot more protected.


Though the lungs are sterile at birth, they are progressively colonised by microbes.


The new research showed that soon soon after birth, mice were vulnerable to inflammation in the lungs when exposed to allergens.


But above the very first two weeks of life, colonisation of their lungs by bacteria led to the improvement of special immune cells with anti-asthma properties.


The regulatory T cells stored the immune system in verify and suppressed the inflammation.


Even so, in cases the place the lungs were stored sterile – stopping the growth of bacteria – they became a lot more sensitive to bugs, resulting in asthma.


Dr Benjamin Marsland, from the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, lead writer, explained the study recommended that bacteria could also be used to build remedies to avoid or counter asthma.


He stated: “Our present review indicates that this kind of treatments could be drastically optimised by focusing on the narrow developmental window that exists following birth, or by targeting certain molecules.


“A important long term phase will be to translate these findings to human infants.”


Asthma attacks are caused by an above-powerful inflammatory immune response to allergy triggers this kind of as residence dust mites, pets or air pollutants.


A lot more than five million folks in the Uk are undergoing treatment for asthma, like 1.1 million children.


The UK’s asthma costs are amongst the highest in Europe, and the third highest for deaths, claiming 1250 deaths in 2012.


Dr Marsland said: “Epidemiological information point towards a critical time period in early existence for the duration of which environmental cues can set an individual on a trajectory towards respiratory well being or ailment. The neonatal immune method matures throughout this period, even though minor is recognized about the signals that lead to its maturation. Here we report that the formation of the lung microbiota is a crucial parameter in this procedure.”



Mothers informed, stick to soap and water with newborns

Mothers informed, stick to soap and water with newborns

Louise Silverton, RCM deputy general secretary said: “Parents of newborns do need to take care but individuals can go also far with an obsession with cleanliness. Things like hand washing before feeding and following nappy changing washing clothes at the proper temperature keeping infants away from pets and from guests with infections are all essential. But when it comes to washing, soap and water is ample – there is truly no want for dad and mom be making use of antibacterial wipes which can avert the baby’s organic immunity from creating.”


According to the “hygiene hypothesis”, some germ exposure is necessary to prime the establishing immune program and hold it underneath manage.


The theory suggests that when exposure to parasites, bacteria and viruses is restricted early in lifestyle young children face a greater likelihood of possessing allergies, asthma, and other autoimmune illnesses throughout adulthood.


Preceding research have identified that youngsters with older siblings, people who grew up on a farm or who attended day care early in lifestyle seem to show reduce rates of allergy symptoms than people whose early childhood was far more protected.


Even though the lungs are sterile at birth, they are progressively colonised by microbes.


The new research showed that quickly after birth, mice had been vulnerable to irritation in the lungs when exposed to allergens.


But more than the very first two weeks of daily life, colonisation of their lungs by bacteria led to the development of special immune cells with anti-asthma properties.


The regulatory T cells stored the immune system in verify and suppressed the irritation.


Nevertheless, in instances the place the lungs were stored sterile – stopping the advancement of bacteria, -they became much more delicate to bugs, resulting in asthma.


Dr Benjamin Marsland, from the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, lead writer, stated the study advised that bacteria could also be used to create treatments to stop or counter asthma.


He stated: “Our recent examine signifies that such therapies could be drastically optimised by targeting the narrow developmental window that exists following birth, or by targeting certain molecules.


“A essential future step will be to translate these findings to human infants.”


Asthma attacks are brought on by an over-robust inflammatory immune response to allergy triggers this kind of as home dust mites, pets or air pollutants.


A lot more than 5 million folks in the United kingdom are undergoing treatment for asthma, which includes 1.one million youngsters.


The UK’s asthma charges re amid the highest in Europe, and the third highest for deaths, claiming 1250 deaths in 2012.


Dr Marsland mentioned: “Epidemiological information stage towards a critical time period in early life for the duration of which environmental cues can set an individual on a trajectory towards respiratory overall health or illness. The neonatal immune method matures throughout this period, even though small is identified about the signals that lead to its maturation. Right here we report that the formation of the lung microbiota is a crucial parameter in this process.”



Mothers informed, stick to soap and water with newborns

6 Şubat 2014 Perşembe

China"s little one hatch scheme expands for unwanted disabled newborns

Baby Hatch Tianjin Institute of Children

A baby hatch named “little one safety island” at the Tianjin Institute of Children’s Welfare, in Tianjin, China. Photograph: China Stringer Network/Reuters




Fangfang was just a couple of days old when she was abandoned on a close to-freezing New Year’s Day in north China. She was fairly lucky. Unlike the a lot of who are found dumped in train stations or toilets, her loved ones left her at a risk-free, warm shelter.


Dozens of babies have been secretly dropped off at the so-known as infant security islands, or hatches, set up late last year below a scheme to protect undesirable offspring.


“We need to have to develop these islands to shield children from even more injury,” says Zhang Min, head of a government-run orphanage in the northern coastal city of Tianjin, exactly where Fangfang was found. The babies there are brought to a cosy room with pink walls, a cradle and an incubator. Fangfang was left in a handbag on the floor.


The Chinese media usually reviews harrowing tales of infants currently being dumped, a problem attributed to youthful females unaware they are pregnant, or the birth of an undesired woman in a society that puts greater value on boys, or China’s strict household preparing guidelines.


In one this kind of case, a baby was found in a skip on the outskirts of Beijing. He did not survive. In another, firefighters in eastern China rescued an abandoned newborn boy from a sewage pipe.


Chinese orphanages have witnessed a falling quantity of abandoned children given that 2005, but officials estimate about ten,000 unwanted kids are received every single year. An unknown quantity of abandoned babies are also adopted informally.


When orphanages in China were overwhelmingly filled with women due to the fact of the cultural preference for male heirs and three decades of a strict 1-youngster policy – if couples have been permitted only a single kid, numerous needed to ensure it was a boy.


The preference stays, but it is much less prevalent as the world’s second-greatest economy grows and the country gets to be wealthier. So the abandoned kids tend to be of the two genders – and they are generally significantly sick or disabled.


Fangfang, the 1st child abandoned at the Tianjin hatch, outside the gates of a city orphanage, has Down’s syndrome and congenital heart condition.


Government officials say little one hatches are required due to the fact some new arrivals have serious illnesses and disabilities and are typically in need to have of fast health-related consideration. Every province have to set up a minimal of two by the finish of the yr.


“With a lot more and more disabled young children, it could mean they die if we locate them even ten minutes late,” says Ji Gang, an official with the China Centre for Children’s Welfare and Adoption.


Child hatches have triggered issues that they could encourage far more mothers and fathers to abandon babies. “Youngster abandonment exists. Little one hatches will not encourage much more mother and father to abandon young children,” says Wang Zhenyao, a social welfare specialist. “They will only offer far more accurate numbers.”


Officials note that China has different charity funds and government wellness insurance schemes to aid the sick and disabled. But they also note that China suffers from a lack of a unified welfare technique.


“If there have been this kind of a method, a lot of mother and father would not abandon their young children,” says Ji, of the welfare and adoption centre. “We would not have to develop so several infant hatches.”




China"s little one hatch scheme expands for unwanted disabled newborns