Abstract
BackgroundRespiratory distress syndrome (RDS) is caused by a deficiency of a molecule called surfactant. It occurs in newborns born before 37 weeks of gestation. It is a main cause of morbidity and mortality in the early neonatal period.Therefore, this study aims to assess median time to recovery and predictors of preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome admitted in University of Gondar comprehensive specialized hospital Northwest Ethiopia 2020.MethodsInstitution based retrospective follow up study was conducted on 386 preterm neonates with hyaline membrane disease who were admitted in the neonatal intensive care unit from January, 2016 to December 2018. The data were entered in to EPI info version 7.0 and transferred to Stata version 14.0 for analysis. Both bi-variable and multi variable Weibull parametric model were fitted to identify predictors with 95% confidence interval of hazard ratio (HR) and p-value. P-value less than 0.05 in the multivariable model showed the presence of significant association between covariates and the dependent variable.ResultsThe overall median length of recovery were 11 day with an interquartile range of (7, 16) neonate-days. Being a product of multiple pregnancy (AHR 1.67; 95%CI (1.25, 2.23)), vaginal mode of delivery (AHR 1.6; 95%CI (1.13, 2.26)), and neonatal hypothermia at admission (AHR 1.6; 95%CI (1.13, 2.26)) were found to be significant predictors of time to recovery.ConclusionIn this study the median time to recovery of preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome was slower than the clinical recommendations. Receiving bag and mask ventilation and hypothermia decreased the recovery whereas, vaginal delivery gestational age at birth, being multiple pregnancy, birth weight ≥2000grams were enhance the recovery of preterm neonates with RDS.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference29 articles.
1. Defining the problem: The epidemiology of preterm birth;J. Lumley;BJOG An Int J Obstet Gynaecol,2003
2. Born Too Soon: The global epidemiology of 15 million preterm births;H Blencowe;Reprod Health,2013
3. Review article magnitude of problems of prematurity- national and global perspective: a review;AC Dey;Bangladesh J Child Heal,2012
4. Neonatal morbidity associated with late preterm and early term birth: the roles of gestational age and biological determinants of preterm birth;HK Brown;Int J Epidemiol,2014
5. Global report on preterm birth and stillbirth (1 of 7): definitions, description of the burden and opportunities to improve data;JE Lawn;BMC Pregnancy Childbirth,2015