Abstract

BackgroundA health partnership to improve hospital based neonatal care in Rwanda to reduce neonatal mortality was requested by the Rwandan Ministry of Health. Although many health system improvements have been made, there is a severe shortage of health professionals with neonatal training.MethodsFollowing a needs assessment, a health partnership grant for 2 years was obtained. A team of volunteer neonatologists and paediatricians, neonatal nurses, lactation consultants and technicians with experience in Rwanda or low-income countries was assembled.A neonatal training program was provided in four hospitals (the 2 University hospitals and 2 district hospitals), which focused on nutrition, provision of basic respiratory support with nasal CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure), enhanced record keeping, thermoregulation, vital signs monitoring and infection control. To identify if care delivery improved, audits of nutritional support, CPAP use and its complications, and documentation in newly developed neonatal medical records were conducted. Mortality data of neonatal admissions was obtained.ResultsIntensive neonatal training was provided on 27 short-term visits by 10 specialist health professionals. In addition, a paediatric doctor spent 3 months and two spent 6 months each providing training. A total of 472 training days was conducted in the neonatal units.For nutritional support, significant improvements were demonstrated in reduction in time to initiation of enteral feeds and to achieve full milk feeds, in reduction in maximum postnatal weight loss, but not in days for regaining birth weight. Respiratory support with bubble CPAP was applied to 365 infants in the first 18 months. There were no significant technical problems, but tissue damage, usually transient, to the nose and face was recorded in 13%. New medical records improved documentation by doctors, but nursing staff were reluctant to use them. Mortality for University teaching hospital admissions was reduced from 23.6% in the 18 months before the project to 21.7%. For the two district hospitals, mortality reduced from 10% to 8.1%. A major barrier to training and improved care was low number of nurses working on neonatal units and staff turnover.ConclusionThis health partnership delivered an intensive program of capacity building by volunteer specialists. Improved care and documentation were demonstrated. CPAP was successfully introduced. Mortality was reduced. This format can be adapted for further training and improvement programs to improve the quality of facility-based care.

Highlights

  • A health partnership to improve hospital based neonatal care in Rwanda to reduce neonatal mortality was requested by the Rwandan Ministry of Health

  • From 2010, a partnership in child health was in place in Rwanda to provide ETAT+ (Emergency Triage, Assessment and Treatment plus Admission) courses for the recognition and initial management of sick children (Imperial College London, subsequently Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, UK and Rwanda Pediatric Association, Rwandan Ministry of Health and Kenya Paediatric Association health partnerships)

  • There were only about 26 paediatricians and no neonatologists or specialist neonatal nurses in the country. The aim of this partnership was to improve neonatal care and reduce neonatal mortality in 4 major neonatal units, including the 2 University hospitals and 2 District hospitals, one of which was the largest maternity unit in the country and the other a medium-sized district hospital. After identifying their major training requirements, we aimed to provide a program of intensive capacity building by visiting volunteer health professionals

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Summary

Introduction

A health partnership to improve hospital based neonatal care in Rwanda to reduce neonatal mortality was requested by the Rwandan Ministry of Health. From 2010, a partnership in child health was in place in Rwanda to provide ETAT+ (Emergency Triage, Assessment and Treatment plus Admission) courses for the recognition and initial management of sick children (Imperial College London, subsequently Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, UK and Rwanda Pediatric Association, Rwandan Ministry of Health and Kenya Paediatric Association health partnerships). This wellestablished, evidence-based, 5-day course covers the 10 commonest causes of paediatric admissions in East Africa [2]. The ETAT+ course has a neonatal component, a more extensive neonatal training program was requested by Dr Agnes Binagwaho, former Rwandan Minister of Health (personal communication, TL)

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