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Home-based management of neonatal sepsis: 23 years of sustained implementation and effectiveness in rural Gadchiroli, India, 1996–2019
by
Bang, Anand
, Bang, Abhay
, Deshmukh, Mahesh
, Baitule, Sanjay
, Duby, Jessica
in
Algorithms
/ Antibiotics
/ Birth weight
/ Births
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Education
/ Families & family life
/ Health facilities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Infant mortality
/ Intervention
/ Neonates
/ Newborn babies
/ Original Research
/ other study design
/ Quality management
/ Sepsis
/ Supervisors
2022
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Home-based management of neonatal sepsis: 23 years of sustained implementation and effectiveness in rural Gadchiroli, India, 1996–2019
by
Bang, Anand
, Bang, Abhay
, Deshmukh, Mahesh
, Baitule, Sanjay
, Duby, Jessica
in
Algorithms
/ Antibiotics
/ Birth weight
/ Births
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Education
/ Families & family life
/ Health facilities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Infant mortality
/ Intervention
/ Neonates
/ Newborn babies
/ Original Research
/ other study design
/ Quality management
/ Sepsis
/ Supervisors
2022
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Home-based management of neonatal sepsis: 23 years of sustained implementation and effectiveness in rural Gadchiroli, India, 1996–2019
by
Bang, Anand
, Bang, Abhay
, Deshmukh, Mahesh
, Baitule, Sanjay
, Duby, Jessica
in
Algorithms
/ Antibiotics
/ Birth weight
/ Births
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Education
/ Families & family life
/ Health facilities
/ Health services
/ Hospitalization
/ Infant mortality
/ Intervention
/ Neonates
/ Newborn babies
/ Original Research
/ other study design
/ Quality management
/ Sepsis
/ Supervisors
2022
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Home-based management of neonatal sepsis: 23 years of sustained implementation and effectiveness in rural Gadchiroli, India, 1996–2019
Journal Article
Home-based management of neonatal sepsis: 23 years of sustained implementation and effectiveness in rural Gadchiroli, India, 1996–2019
2022
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Overview
IntroductionAlthough hospitalisation remains the preferred management for neonatal sepsis, it is often not possible in resource-limited settings. The Home-Based Newborn Care (HBNC) study in Gadchiroli, India (1995–1998) was the first trial to demonstrate that neonatal sepsis can be managed in the community. HBNC continues to operate in Gadchiroli. In 2015, WHO recommended community-based management of neonatal sepsis when hospitalisation is not feasible but called for implementation research. We studied the implementation and effectiveness of home-based management of neonatal sepsis over 23 years in Gadchiroli.MethodsIn this cohort study (1996–2019), community health workers (CHWs) visited neonates at home in 39 villages in Gadchiroli, India. CHWs screened, diagnosed sepsis and offered home-based antibiotic treatment if hospitalisation was refused. We evaluated the implementation outcomes of coverage, diagnostic fidelity and adoption. We assessed the association between treatment type and odds of neonatal death using mixed effects logistic regression. Time trends were analysed using the Mann-Kendall test.ResultsCHWs screened 93.8% (17 700/18 874) of neonates (coverage) and correctly diagnosed 89% (1051/1177) of sepsis episodes (diagnostic fidelity). Home-based management was preferred by 88.4% (929/1051) of parents (adoption), with 5.6 percent of total neonates receiving antibioties at home. Compared with neonates treated at home, the adjusted odds of death was 5.27 (95% CI 1.91 to 14.58) times higher when parents refused all treatment, 2.17 (95% CI 1.07 to 4.41) times higher when CHWs missed the diagnosis and 5.45 (95% CI 2.74 to 10.87) times higher when parents accepted hospital referral. Implementation outcomes remained consistent over 23 years (coverage p=0.57; fidelity p=0.57; adoption p=0.26; mortality p=0.71). The rate of facility births increased (p<0.01) and the sepsis incidence decreased (p<0.05) over 23 years.ConclusionImplementation of home-based management of neonatal sepsis was sustainable and effective over 23 years. During this period, the need for home-based management in Gadchiroli is declining. Home-based management is advised where sepsis remains a major cause of neonatal mortality and hospital access is limited.
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