Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatrics and Child Health Nursing, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Wollo University, Dessie, Ethiopia
Abstract
Background: Ethiopia ranked fourth in the world in terms of neonatal mortality rates, with birth asphyxia accounting for the majority of neonatal deaths. Objective: This study aimed to determine the prevalence of birth asphyxia and associated factors among newborns delivered in government hospitals of the Eastern Amhara region, Northeastern Ethiopia, 2022. Methods: A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted in 4 government hospitals between March 10, 2022, and May 8, 2022. The subjects in the study were selected using a systematic random sampling technique. Face-to-face interviews and chart reviews were used to collect the data. The association was discovered through multivariate logistic regression analysis. Result: In this study, the prevalence of birth asphyxia was 13.1% (48) of the total 367 newborns. Mothers who could not read and write (AOR = 9.717; 95% CI = 3.06, 10.857); infants born with low birth weight (AOR = 2.360; 95% CI = 1.004, 5.547); primipara mothers (AOR = 5.138; 95% CI = 1.060, 26.412); mothers with less than 37 weeks of gestation (AOR = 4.261; 95% CI = 1.232, 14.746); and caesarian section delivery (AOR = 2.444; 95% CI = 1.099, 5.432) were predictors of birth asphyxia. Conclusion: The magnitude of birth asphyxia has managed to remain a health concern in the study setting. As a result, special attention should be paid to uneducated and primi-mothers during antenatal care visits, and prematurity and caesarian section delivery complication reduction efforts should be bolstered to prevent birth asphyxia and its complications.
Reference44 articles.
1. WHO. Newsroom/Fact sheets/Detail/Newborn Mortality; 28 January 2022.
2. United Nations Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UN IGME). Levels & trends in child mortality: Report 2021, estimates developed by the United Nations Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation. United Nations Children’s Fund, New York; 2021.
3. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of healthiness
4. United Nations Inter-Agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation. Levels & trends in child mortality: Report 2019, estimates developed by the United Nations Inter-Agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation. United Nations Children’s Fund; 2019.
5. Global, regional, and national levels of neonatal, infant, and under-5 mortality during 1990–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013