Background: Four million neonatal deaths are estimated to occur each year and almost all in low income countries, especially among the poorest. There is a paucity of data on newborn health from sub-Saharan Africa and few studies have assessed inequity in uptake of newborn care practices. We assessed socioeconomic differences in use of newborn care practices in order to inform policy and programming in Uganda.Methods: All mothers with infants aged 1-4 months (n = 414) in a Demographic Surveillance Site were interviewed. Households were stratified into quintiles of socioeconomic status (SES). Three composite outcomes (good neonatal feeding, good cord care, and optimal thermal care) were created by combining related individual practices from a list of twelve antenatal/essential newborn care practices. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to identify determinants of each dichotomised composite outcome.Results: There were low levels of coverage of newborn care practices among both the poorest and the least poor. SES and place of birth were not associated with any of the composite newborn care practices. Of newborns, 46% had a facility delivery and only 38% were judged to have had good cord care, 42% optimal thermal care, and 57% were considered to have had adequate neonatal feeding. Mothers were putting powder on the cord; using a bottle to feed the baby; and mixing/replacing breast milk with various substitutes. Multiparous mothers were less likely to have safe cord practices (OR 0.5, CI 0.3 – 0.9) as were mothers whose labour began at night (OR 0.6, CI 0.4 – 0.9).Conclusion: Newborn care practices in this setting are low and do not differ much by socioeconomic group. Despite being established policy, most neonatal interventions are not reaching newborns, suggesting a “policy-to-practice gap”. To improve newborn survival, newborn care should be integrated into the current maternal and child interventions, and should be implemented at both community and health facility level as part of a universal coverage strategy. © 2010 Waiswa et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
The study was conducted in the Makerere University-operated Iganga-Mayuge Demographic Surveillance Site (DSS) located in eastern Uganda, about 120 km east of the capital Kampala. The Basoga contribute about 10% of the population of Uganda, but their practices are similar to those of other Bantu ethnic groups who are the majority in Uganda. Eighty percent of the population are peasants and live on less than US$1 a day. An estimated 49% of women and 68% of men are literate (Iganga District Local Government 2008). Traditional birth attendants (TBAs) are significant actors in the provision of antenatal and delivery care in the district. At the time of the study, there were no specific interventions promoted to target the newborn, either at facility or community level. About 30% of the DSS population lives in peri-urban settings with relatively better access to health care compared to their rural counterparts. The DSS has a population of about 67,200 people in 65 villages, 18 parishes and 12,000 households. The household and community structures have been mapped using the Global Positioning System. Over forty locally recruited field assistants whose minimum education is upper secondary school level collect data from each household every fourth month and are supervised by a group of DSS staff from a central office. Village-based demographic scouts notify DSS staff of all deaths and births in the area as they occur on a continuous basis. The DSS area has 13 health facilities of which ten are government facilities including the district hospital, the other three being non-Governmental organisation facilities. The area is also served by over 120 pharmacies and private clinics. The neonatal and post-neonatal mortality rates in the DSS are estimated at 22.3 and 55.2 per 1000 live births, which compares very well with estimates for the entire region as reported in the national demographic health survey (24 and 50 per 1000 live births) [8]. This population-based cross-sectional study represents socio-demographic, SES, and antenatal and newborn care practices among Ugandan women with a baby aged 1-4 months (n = 414). Socio-demographic and household SES information were collected in a separate survey a year earlier. Socio-demographic information, as collected from the DSS, included age, level of education, occupation, religion, tribe, birth order, and sex of the reference child. Household SES is represented by household assets. The DSS field assistants underwent a three day training to use the survey tool which had been translated into Lusoga, the local language in the area. The training included piloting the tool among 25 mothers attending a postnatal clinic at the local hospital. The survey was conducted from March to August 2007. Mothers who had had a stillbirth (data not available) or a neonatal death (64 neonates) were not interviewed for this study. Data collected in this study included information about antenatal care (ANC) practices (attendance, place of attendance, number of visits made, HIV testing, birth preparedness, use of drugs to prevent malaria in pregnancy, and provider of ANC) and delivery (place, time of labour onset and type of attendant at delivery). Women were also asked about their experiences with ENC practices, including type of instrument used to cut the cord, type of material used to tie the cord, when the newborn was first dried and wrapped, length of time before the newborn was bathed the first time, whether any pre-lacteal feeds were given, length of time (hours/days) before breastfeeding was first initiated, and whether the baby was exclusively breastfed during the first month of life. The quality assurance of data was through daily assessment via questionnaires filled-in by a supervisor; in cases of error or incompleteness of data, corrective measures were implemented immediately. Data were entered using FoxPro and cleaned, linked with the DSS database, and then transferred to STATA, version 10, for analysis. For SES, we used the same group of context-specific assets used by the Uganda Bureau of Statistics. These items were screened for relevance, and reliability testing was done using Cronbach’s alpha [12]. The final list included the number of sleeping rooms, type of floor material, type of roof material, wall material, fuel used for cooking and source of light. Other variables were households having or not having the following items: a radio, a sewing machine, an electric flat iron, type of bed, charcoal flat iron, a bed net, kerosene lamp, kerosene stove, car, tea table, refrigerator, television set, sound stereo, telephone, mattress, wheel barrow, cell phone and camera. These gave a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.848. Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed and the first principal component was scored to create an asset index that was used to group all households in the DSS into wealth quintiles [13]. Using the following twelve ANC/ENC practices, we calculated the mean and median number of practices accessed by the mother/newborn: ANC, tetanus toxoid, antimalarial use during pregnancy, HIV test, and insecticide treated net (ITN) use, anemia drugs, clean birth, facility delivery, safe cord care, optimal thermal care, good breastfeeding, and ITN after birth. The following composite outcome variables were then created: (i) Good cord care (defined as use of a clean cutting instrument to cut the umbilical cord plus clean thread to tie the cord plus no substance applied to the cord); (ii) Optimal thermal care (defined as baby put skin-to-skin at birth or wrapped at birth plus first bath after 6 or more hours); and (iii) Good neonatal breastfeeding (defined as initiating breastfeeding within the first one hour after birth plus baby given no supplements at all in the first month of life). These composite variables were then dichotomised to Yes (all practices present) or No (one or more practices missing). The data were then subjected to standard descriptive analysis. Chi-square statistics were performed to compare the levels of each of the dependent variables with the explanatory variables. A multiple logistic regression model was constructed for each dichotomised outcome variable using all of the explanatory variables which were significant at bivariate analysis at a p-value of 0.05 or less after confirming absence of multi-colleneraity between the independent variables. The study was approved following ethical review by the Makerere University School of Public Health Institutional Review Board. As per the DSS routines for non-intrusive research verbal consent was sought from each mother after reading to her about and adequately explaining the purpose of the study. Participants were told that they were free not to participate or to withdraw during any stage of the interview. In addition, field assistants were trained to refer sick mothers/newborn babies with problems to the nearby government health facilities where treatment is provided free of charge.
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