Abstract

Background Admission hypothermia is still an underappreciated major challenge for new-born survival in low-resource settings. The WHO recommends skin-to-skin contact as the simplest and safest way for maintaining the body temperature even during transportation. Quality improvement initiatives for hospitalised new-borns have shown benefits like a reduction in neonatal morbidity and mortality. This study was undertaken in a resource-constrained public hospital in southern India with an aim to reduce neonatal hypothermia at admission to <20%. Method It was a prospective, quality improvement study undertaken over 20 weeks. All neonates born in the selected delivery room (DR), requiring transportation to the neonatal intensive care unit, were included. The primary outcome indicators were the mean axillary temperature of neonates measured upon arrival at the neonatal intensive care unit and the percentage of neonates with hypothermia at admission. Improving the thermoregulatory practices and ambient DR temperature to >25˚C, transportation by the kangaroo method, and a portable infant warmer (PIW) were implemented in three successive Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Result In the thirdPDSA cycle, the mean admission temperature (36.51˚C ±0.82) was significantly (p<0.0001) higher when compared with the baseline phase (35.41˚C ±1.09), and there was a significant (p<0.001) reduction in hypothermia (33.33%). The aim was achieved in the last two weeks of the third cycle with a reduction in hypothermia to 17.6%. Conclusion Implementation of appropriate thermoregulatory practices and low-cost strategies like the kangaroo method and PIW using quality improvement methodology significantly reduced admission hypothermia.

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