Primary studies included in this systematic review

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Primary study

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Journal PloS one
Year 2008
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BACKGROUND: Birth asphyxia kills 0.7 to 1.6 million newborns a year globally with 99% of deaths in developing countries. Effective newborn resuscitation could reduce this burden of disease but the training of health-care providers in low income settings is often outdated. Our aim was to determine if a simple one day newborn resuscitation training (NRT) alters health worker resuscitation practices in a public hospital setting in Kenya. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted a randomised, controlled trial with health workers receiving early training with NRT (n = 28) or late training (the control group, n = 55). The training was adapted locally from the approach of the UK Resuscitation Council. The primary outcome was the proportion of appropriate initial resuscitation steps with the frequency of inappropriate practices as a secondary outcome. Data were collected on 97 and 115 resuscitation episodes over 7 weeks after early training in the intervention and control groups respectively. Trained providers demonstrated a higher proportion of adequate initial resuscitation steps compared to the control group (trained 66% vs control 27%; risk ratio 2.45, [95% CI 1.75-3.42], p<0.001, adjusted for clustering). In addition, there was a statistically significant reduction in the frequency of inappropriate and potentially harmful practices per resuscitation in the trained group (trained 0.53 vs control 0.92; mean difference 0.40, [95% CI 0.13-0.66], p = 0.004). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Implementation of a simple, one day newborn resuscitation training can be followed immediately by significant improvement in health workers' practices. However, evidence of the effects on long term performance or clinical outcomes can only be established by larger cluster randomised trials. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Controlled-Trials.com ISRCTN92218092.

Primary study

Unclassified

Journal Journal of obstetric, gynecologic, and neonatal nursing : JOGNN / NAACOG
Year 2007
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OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of a training program for care providers in improving practice of essential newborn care in obstetric units. DESIGN: Before-and-after study with an intervention and a control group. SETTING: Five hospitals in the Puttalam district in Sri Lanka. PARTICIPANTS: Eight hundred and ninety-two mother-newborn pairs (446 before and 446 three months after). INTERVENTION: A 4-day training program on essential newborn care for doctors, nurses, and midwives of the obstetric units in two hospitals. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: By direct observation, practices of essential newborn care at delivery in the labor room on a subsample. By interviewing mothers, immediate skin-to-skin contact and early initiation of breastfeeding. From health records, "undesirable health events" of the newborns. RESULTS: Practices of cleanliness, thermal protection, and neonatal assessment improved significantly in the intervention group. The intervention was effective in improving skin-to-skin contact by 1.5 times and early initiation of breastfeeding by 3.4 times. Undesirable health events declined from 32 to 21 per 223 newborns in the intervention group and from 20 to 17 per 223 newborns in the control group. CONCLUSION: A comprehensive 4-day training program can be followed by a significant improvement in essential newborn care practices in obstetric units.