Abstract

Neonatal hypothermia is a great concern with near epidemic levels globally. In Kenya, its prevalence is as high as 87% with limited local data on the associated factors such as adherence to warm chain guidelines as recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO) is limited. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of hypothermia and level of adherence to the WHO thermal care guidelines among newborns admitted at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH). It adopted a prospective study design of following up neonates for the first 24 hours of admission to the MTRH newborn unit. Thermometry, interview of mothers and observation of thermal care practices was done. Descriptive and inferential statistical techniques were adopted. Specifically, Pearson's chi-square test of associations between predictors of neonatal hypothermia and management outcomes was conducted with their corresponding risk estimates at 95% confidence interval. Among the 372 participants, 64.5% (n = 240) were born at MTRH, 47.6% (177) were preterm and 53.2% (198) had birth weights below 2500 grams. Admission hypothermia was noted among 73.7% (274) and 13% (49) died on the first day of admission. Only 7.8% (29) newborns accessed optimal thermal care. Prematurity, day one mortality and adherence to the warm chain were significantly (p<0.001) associated with admission hypothermia. Inappropriate thermal appliance, inadequate clothing and late breastfeeding significantly increased the risk of neonatal hypothermia. Absence of admission hypothermia increased the likelihood of neonatal survival more than twenty-fold (AOR = 20.91, 95% CI: 2.15-153.62). Three out four neonates enrolled had admission hypothermia which was significantly associated with prematurity, lack of adherence to warm chain and increased risk of neonatal mortality on the first day of life. There was low adherence to the WHO thermal care guidelines. This should be optimized among preterm neonates to improve likelihood of survival.

Highlights

  • Newborns lose heat through conduction, radiation, convection or evaporation [1]

  • This study aimed at determining the prevalence of neonatal hypothermia, its associated factors and the level of adherence to the World Health Organisation (WHO) thermal care guidelines among newborns admitted at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH)

  • This study reports sub-optimal adherence to the WHO thermal care guidelines at the MTRH newborn unit between July and December 2016 as there was less than 10% optimal adherence to warm chain steps at the first hour of admission

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Summary

Introduction

The World Health Organisation (WHO) defines neonatal hypothermia as an axillary temperature below 36.5 ̊C (97.7 ̊F) among newborns aged below 28 days [2]. It is stratified as either mild (36 ̊C36.4 ̊C), moderate (32 ̊C-35.9 ̊C) and severe hypothermia (

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