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1.
Artículo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-204083

RESUMEN

Background: Childhood pneumonia is the single leading cause of mortality in children aged less than 5 years. Most cases occur in India (43 million); pneumonia is responsible for about 19% of all deaths in children aged less than 5 years. According to Child Health and Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) latest estimates, Pneumonia was responsible for 0.397 million of a total estimated 1.682 million under-five deaths in India.Methods: A hospital based prospective longitudinal study. In the present study 200 cases belong to age group 2 months to 5 years' fulfilling WHO criteria for pneumonia who were' attended to the department of paediatrics, Siddhartha medical college' from January 2017 to January 2018 were evaluated the risk factors in relation to their outcomes after obtaining consentResults: Out of 200 children with severe pneumonia' 11 risk factors are studied for significance against outcomes like Death of the patient, mechanical ventilation oxygen supplementation, hospital stay of patient and total duration of illness, Risk factors found to be significant are maternal literacy (p =0.0002617), malnutrition (p <0.00001), exclusive' breastfeeding (p <0.05), low birth weight (p <0.05), immunisation (p=0.01).Conclusions: Severe malnutrition, maternal illiteracy, exclusive breast feeding, improper immunization and low birth weight are having a significant association with poor outcomes in children with severe pneumonia. Proper preventive strategies to decrease the incidence of these risk factors can help in increasing the survival rate of children with severe pneumonia.

2.
Artículo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-203885

RESUMEN

Background: Breastfeeding is the corner stone of child survival, nutrition and development and maternal health. The World Health Organization recommends that all neonates be breastfed within one hour of birth. Early initiation of breast feeding (EIBF) is a sentinel indicator for successful breastfeeding. The aim of this study is to assess the practice of early initiation of breastfeeding among babies delivered in our tertiary care teaching unit and to list out the reasons for delay in implementation.Methods: This study is done on 409 postnatal mothers who delivered in our hospital. All the mother-baby dyads enrolled were interviewed within 12 hours of delivery. Data was collected through clinical records and interview of mothers.Results: EIBF is seen only in 19.8% of babies. Median time of initiation of breast feed is 110 minutes. Primiparous mothers had a delay in initiation of feed (p<0.01). The mothers who received practical support from health care providers had successful EIBF(p< 0.01). The main reasons for delay in feeding were lack of early, uninterrupted skin to skin contact between baby and mother and the separation of mother - baby dyads immediately after delivery.Conclusions: EIBF rate in our centre is extremely low compared to the national standards of 44.6%. Several gaps in EIBF need to be addressed and a strict institutional protocol need to be followed. Periodic review of EIBF rates needs to be done by every institute to achieve a global target of > 90%.

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