Patients
at the kangaroo mother care unit, Busia Referral Hospital. Photo: Tonny
Omondi
|
●The name of this
practice, also known as skin-to-skin contact, is derived from the way kangaroos
carry their young ones in pouches after birth. ●The technique started in Colombia more than 30 years ago due
to a shortage of incubators. ●Faced with a shortage of
incubators and the rising number of women delivering from hospitals following
the introduction of free maternity services, most public hospitals are adopting
the kangaroo method.
Ms Maureen Akinyi
lovingly clutches her twins, a bundle of joy that she considers a miracle, at
the Busia Referral Hospital maternity ward. The two were born prematurely and
she did not expect them to live.
Business Daily
Kenya report continues:
“Feeling
their heartbeats is such a delight to me,” says the 24-year-old mother.
At
27 weeks, the twins are among the 17 early-term newborns struggling to survive
at the hospital. A full-term pregnancy lasts for 40 weeks.
According
to the World Health Organization (WHO), pre-term birth complications are the
leading cause of death among children under five years of age, responsible for
nearly one million deaths in 2015.
Every
year an estimated 15 million babies are born pre-term (before 37 weeks of
gestation) and the number is rising, according to WHO.
Three
quarters of the babies can be saved with current, cost-effective interventions
including kangaroo mother care; where a baby is carried or closely wrapped
around the mother’s chest.
The
name of this practice, also known as skin-to-skin contact, is derived from the
way kangaroos carry their young ones in pouches after birth.
The
technique started in Colombia more than 30 years ago due to a shortage of
incubators.
The
effort paid off and has quite a following today. The technique also reduces the
need for highly skilled staff in the neonatal unit.
After
seeing how tinny her children were at birth, Ms Akinyi had little hope that
they would live.
The
two weighed 1.9 and two kilogrammes respectively. Their internal organs were
not fully developed.
They
were placed in incubators for three days, but given that the equipment are few
they were discharged and introduced to the kangaroo technique so that others
could use the incubators.
Ms
Akinyi says the effect the technique had on her sons surprised her and was an
eye opener.
‘‘Within
two weeks my sons had added weight to 2.1 and 2.4 kilogrammes respectively.
From the stressed sons they initially were, they became very relaxed. The
intimacy, comfort and safety a wrap offers babies is excellent. I love the fact
that it allows skin-to-skin contact with my babies and frequent
breast-feeding,” she says.
Luckily
for Ms Akinyi the hospital is among those in Kenya that have adopted the
technique which eliminates the need for expensive equipment in resource poor
areas.
The
practice which Dr Ojwang Lusi, the Chief Officer of Health in Kisumu County,
says is “as effective as an incubator” has gained traction all over the
country.
At
the Jaramogi Oginga Teaching and Referral Hospital in Kisumu 30 mothers can be
seen hugging their tiny newborns wrapped up and wearing wool beanies.
The
same applies to Kericho District Hospital, Kombewa Sub County Hospital, Siaya
Referral Hospital and Mama Lucy Kibaki Hospital.
Faced
with a shortage of incubators and the rising number of women delivering from
hospitals following the introduction of free maternity services, most public
hospitals are adopting the kangaroo method.
Babies
have been sharing incubators in most of the facilities, exposing them to
communicable diseases and other risks that often lead to death.
Kenyan
public hospitals have 93 incubators meant to cater for over 500 daily births.
There is also the problem of shortage of space for incubators.
In
some instances an incubator, which ordinarily is meant for one baby, holds two
or more.
“An
infant may be okay, but things start going wrong after placing another baby in
the same incubator. Eventually you lose both of them to infection,” says Dr
Lusi.
The
crisis, if not averted, increases child mortality in public hospitals, he adds.
This is why hospitals are adopting the kangaroo system in an attempt to avert
deaths and ease demand for incubators.
Save
the Children International has been fronting the technique in East Africa.
“We
train healthcare workers in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and other developing
countries to increase chances of infant survival and reduce mortality in
disadvantaged communities,” says Ms Teresa Akun, the Save the Children
International kangaroo mother care co-ordinator for Kenya.
She
says they deal with counties with high maternal and new born deaths which
include Bungoma, Migori, Busia and Kisumu.
According
to UNICEF, prematurity is the leading cause of newborn deaths in Uganda,
accounting for 38 per cent.
With
the introduction of the technique, neonatal mortality decreased by 20 per cent
between 2000 and 2010.
The
technique has lowered child mortality at Mama Lucy Kibaki Hospital from 20 per
cent to 3.2 per cent, according to Ms Magdaline Njeri Waihenya, a kangaroo
mother care expert at the hospital. The hospital receives an overwhelming
number of mothers seeking delivery services.
“Several
newborn cases are referred here. Our resources are increasingly becoming meagre
hence the importance of the technique,” said Ms Waihenya.
Ministry
of Health statistics indicate that of the 1.5 million Kenyan live births
annually, 188,000 babies are born too soon; below 37 weeks.
This
means that out of every eight children one is premature. Kenya is among
countries with the highest rate of premature babies worldwide.
“This
is worrying hence the need to adopt and implement the technique in all
facilities to bring down the number,” says Dr Nicholas Muraguri, the Principal
Secretary for Health.
“Kangaroo
care is the way to go because it keeps the child warm and infections that are
inherited in wards are reduced. We are going to include the technique as part
of maternal and newborn care initiatives. We will mobilise resources to scale
it up in all facilities.”
Dr
Deo Mtasiwa, Tanzania’s Health ministry Deputy Permanent Secretary, says 16 per
cent of babies are born prematurely with 45,000 neonatal deaths recorded every
year.
“Kangaroo
mother care is one of the evidence based interventions that will contribute to
the reduction of neonatal mortality. It is less labour intensive and requires
limited resources,” says Dr Mtasiwa.
Through
the technique, he says, Tanzania has reduced mortality in under-fives by 24 per
cent.
The
2010 Tanzania Demographic and Health Survey (TDHS) indicates that child
mortality has been reduced by almost half, dropping from 96 deaths per 1,000
births in the 1996-2000 period to 51 in 2010.
A
2015 report by Save the Children International says the technique is prominent
in Uganda. Prematurity is the leading cause of newborn deaths in Uganda,
accounting for 38 per cent.
With
the introduction of the technique, neonatal mortality decreased by 20 per cent
between 2000 and 2010.
Dr
Lusi says the comfort and interaction afforded by the kangaroo technique
enables babies to grow and develop faster.
“The
technique also reduces staff workload since mothers are involved. It also eases
congestion in incubators,” says Dr Lusi.
‘‘The
method is cost effective and efficient in that when modern facilities are not
available, or due to shortage of skilled labour or lack of power, mothers can
continue taking care of their babies.
Specialised
follow-up
‘‘The
method is simple, it is initiated in hospitals but can be continued at home
with frequent visits for specialised follow-up.”
Additionally,
the method bonds mother and child and reduces hospital stay as well as
infections. Incubators separate babies from their mothers, depriving them of
the necessary contact.
“One
method that has worked to reduce neonatal deaths in Africa is kangaroo mother
care,” says Dr Tigest Ketsela Mengestu, director of the Health Promotion
Cluster at WHO’s Africa office.
The
technique can prevent close to 450,000 newborn deaths annually as it keeps them
warm, which is especially important because tiny bodies lose heat rapidly
making them highly vulnerable to illness, infection and death, Dr Mengestu
says.
Initially
considered an “alternative for the poor,” WHO gave the practice a boost in 2004
when it recognized it as a way of promoting breast feeding and stimulating a
child’s cognitive development.
The
method has since been shown to reduce mortality among pre-term babies in
hospitals by 51 per cent if started in the first week of life.
WHO
confirms that Malawi is a prime example of where the technique has been successfully
used.
Infant
mortality among newborn babies in the country was reduced from 40 deaths per
1,000 births in 2000 to 24 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2012.
Malawi
is among the few African countries which achieved the 2015 Millennium
Development Goal 4, which targeted to reduce the under-five mortality rate by
two-thirds.
In
an interview with the Business Daily, Dr Walter Otieno, a leading pediatrician
in western Kenya, says the leading cause of death in premature babies is
hypothermia (low body temperature).
Most
public hospitals are struggling with a shortage of facilities including
incubators, necessitating the technique.
“Most pre-term births are either because of early induction of labour, infections or chronic conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure. No child should be separated from her mother for faster growth and development,” says Dr Otieno.
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