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Outcomes in a Rural Ugandan Neonatal Unit Before and During the Early COVID-19 Pandemic: A Retrospective Cohort Study

22 Pages Posted: 23 Jun 2021

See all articles by Anna Hedstrom

Anna Hedstrom

University of Washington - Department of Pediatrics; University of Washington - Department of Global Health

Paul Mubiri

Makerere University

James Nyonyintono

Kiwoko Hospital

Josephine Nakakande

Kiwoko Hospital

Brooke Magnusson

Adara Development

Madeline Vaughan

Adara Development

Peter Waiswa

Makerere University - Department of Health Policy, Planning and Management

Maneesh Batra

University of Washington

More...

Abstract

Background: Little has been published on neonatal outcomes from low resource facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the past 20 years Uganda has improved newborn mortality but the pandemic and resulting restrictions threaten to affect this vulnerable segment of the population. During the first two months of the pandemic in Uganda travel was tightly restricted for pregnant women and sick newborns and public transport was difficult to access for two months thereafter.

Methods: We report outcomes from admissions captured in an existing electronic dataset of a well-established newborn unit in central Uganda before (September 2019 to March 2020) and during the early COVID-19 period (April – September 2020). We report excess mortality as the percent change in mortality over what was expected based on seasonal trends.

Findings: There was an 8% decrease in admissions from outside the facility and an increase in overall admissions with birth asphyxia (22% vs. 15%) during the early pandemic. Patients born outside the facility were older on admission than previously (median 1 day of age vs. on the day of birth). Mortality significantly differed between the COVID-19 period and pre-COVID-19 periods [15·7% (89/567) vs. 11·1% (69/619), p=0·017]. Mortality was increased in all categories of birthweight and diagnosis. Most prominent was the increased mortality among patients born outside the facility (21·2% vs. 14·3%, p= 0·028), a relative increase of 55% above seasonal expected mortality in this group.

Interpretation: This increased mortality is likely attributed to disruptions due to the pandemic affecting maternal and newborn demand for, access to and quality of peripartum healthcare. Impacts on these vulnerable newborns requires deliberate focus by health officials to prioritize their care despite pandemic conditions.

Funding Information: Adara Development.

Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethics Approval Statement: Human Subjects Approval was obtained from Makerere University School of Public Health Institutional Review Board (protocol number 917) and approved by the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology (registration number SS813ES). The University of Washington institutional review board designated this as an exempt study.

Suggested Citation

Hedstrom, Anna and Mubiri, Paul and Nyonyintono, James and Nakakande, Josephine and Magnusson, Brooke and Vaughan, Madeline and Waiswa, Peter and Batra, Maneesh, Outcomes in a Rural Ugandan Neonatal Unit Before and During the Early COVID-19 Pandemic: A Retrospective Cohort Study. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3872622 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3872622

Anna Hedstrom (Contact Author)

University of Washington - Department of Pediatrics ( email )

4800 Sand Point Way NE
Neonatology, FA.2.113 - Seattle Children's Hospita
Seattle, WA 98105
United States
1 (206) 909-4450 (Phone)

University of Washington - Department of Global Health

Seattle, WA 98105
United States

Paul Mubiri

Makerere University ( email )

P.O Box 7062
P.O BOX 7062
Kampala, 256
Uganda

James Nyonyintono

Kiwoko Hospital ( email )

Luweero Nakaseke
Uganda

Josephine Nakakande

Kiwoko Hospital ( email )

Luweero Nakaseke
Uganda

Brooke Magnusson

Adara Development ( email )

Rozelle, NSW 2039
Australia

Madeline Vaughan

Adara Development ( email )

Rozelle, NSW 2039
Australia

Peter Waiswa

Makerere University - Department of Health Policy, Planning and Management ( email )

Maneesh Batra

University of Washington ( email )

Seattle, WA 98195
United States

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