View clinical trials related to Perinatal Death.
Filter by:Overall Objective To introduce PartoMa approach (locally agreed and achievable intrapartum guidelines and a continual in-house training program) to Ethiopian context through continuous fetal heart rate (FHR) monitoring using MOYO device and co-creation of context specific intrapartum care guideline for improving decision making in intrapartum care in Eastern Ethiopia. Interventions 1. Locally agreed and achievable intrapartum guidelines 2. Low dose high frequency trainings (LDHF) 3. Partograph Overall Design A quasi-experimental pre-post study (PartoMa study) Setting Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Haramaya Hospital and Hiwot Fana University Hospital, Ethiopia. Population Laboring women delivering at the study site from February 2023 to March 2025 and their offspring, as well as health providers. Women and their offspring will be enrolled at/after onset of labour and followed until discharge. Endpoints The primary endpoint is perinatal mortality. For further description and secondary outcomes, please see below. Study Time Data collection from June 2023 to May 2025. Specific Objectives i. To assess FHR monitoring practice and use of obstetric guideline for decision making in Hiwot Fana University Hospital ii. To improve feto-maternal outcome through applying PartoMa approach in Hiwot Fana University Hospital. iii. To determine the feasibility, acceptability and sustainability of low-dose high frequency trainings and PartoMa seminars in Hiwot Fana University Hospital. iv. To document changes in pregnancy outcomes after the introduction of PartoMa approaches-seminars, low dose high frequency trainings, continuous FHR monitoring and tailored interventions-in Hiwot Fana University Hospital. Setting PartoMa Ethiopia will be implemented at Haramaya General Hospital and Hiwot Fana Comprehensive Specialized University Hospital, which are both busy maternity units in Eastern Ethiopia. Both are government hospitals with an annual delivery number of around 5,000.
The goal of this MONAS Study is to learn about comprehensive monitoring and nutritional intervention among pregnant women in order to improve maternal and neonatal outcomes. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Are comprehensive monitoring and nutritional intervention among pregnant women can improve maternal outcomes (maternal death, preterm labour, preeclampsia, intrauterine infection, and bleeding during pregnancy and delivery) compared to standard maternal health services? 2. Are comprehensive monitoring and nutritional intervention among pregnant women can improve neonatal outcomes (neonatal death, low birth weight, intrauterine growth restriction, and neonatal asphyxia) compared to standard maternal health services? Participants in the intervention group will receive: - Fetomaternal ultrasound examination each trimester - Complete laboratory examination for nutritional panel (complete blood count with reticulocyte profile and iron profile, vitamin D level, zinc level, fatty acid profile, electrophoresis for Thalassemia) as an addition to standard maternal routine laboratory examination - Supplements: multivitamin, minerals, vitamin D, fatty acid - Intervention regarding any abnormal results of nutritional panel - All standard maternal health services according to Indonesian Ministry of Health protocol Participants in the control group will receive: - All standard maternal health services according to Indonesian Ministry of Health protocol
The goal of this randomized effectiveness study is to evaluate the different targeting strategies for the delivery of balanced energy and protein (BEP) supplements among pregnant women in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The main goals of the study are to: 1) determine the effectiveness of two individual-based antenatal BEP targeting strategies for preventing adverse pregnancy outcomes; 2) compare the cost-effectiveness of the universal BEP provision with two individual-based targeting strategies for preventing adverse pregnancy outcomes; and 3) generate implementation evidence regarding the feasibility and acceptability of different antenatal BEP targeting strategies. Pregnant women will be enrolled during pregnancy, assigned to different strategies of BEP supplementation, and followed from pregnancy through six weeks postpartum to evaluate the impacts of different BEP targeting strategies on pregnancy, maternal, and child outcomes.
This project aims to identify factors linked to pregnancy losses occurring between 20 and 28 weeks of pregnancy that can be modified by changing mother's behaviour or healthcare provision. The death of a child before birth (also called stillbirth or miscarriage) has enduring psychological, social and economic effects for women, their families and wider society. In 2015, the stillbirth rate in the UK was higher than comparable countries. The UK government has committed to reduce stillbirths by 50% by 2025. Presently, stillbirths after 28 weeks of pregnancy have reduced by 16% but there has been no change in losses between 20 and 28 weeks of pregnancy with 1,600 losses estimated to occur at this stage of pregnancy each year. Identification of modifiable causes of stillbirth was identified as a research priority by the Stillbirth Priority Setting Partnership which involved over 1,000 participants, one third of whom were bereaved parents. The investigators previously completed a study of 291 women who had a late stillbirth (after 28 weeks of pregnancy) and 733 women who had a live baby in 41 maternity units in the UK. This study identified factors linked to stillbirth which can be changed including the position women go to sleep in, cigarette smoking and caffeine consumption. In addition, the investigators previously found changes in mother's perception of baby's movements, whether women had tests for diabetes or whether women were exposed to domestic violence or stressful situations. These factors can be addressed by different care in pregnancy. Information from this study has been included in national and international guidelines that aim to reduce stillbirth. The investigators will use the same study type to identify factors associated with pregnancy loss between 20 and 28 weeks of pregnancy (early stillbirth). The investigators have asked parents who have experienced the death of a baby at these stages of pregnancy about the design of the study, the questions that would be asked and how best to approach bereaved parents. This led us to include miscarriages from 20-22 weeks of pregnancy that are not usually "counted" in UK stillbirth statistics. The investigators will need 316 women with stillbirth between 20 and 28 weeks of pregnancy and 632 women with an ongoing live pregnancy to participate in the study. All women will complete a questionnaire about themselves, their diet, behaviours and sleep, their baby's movements and pregnancy care. The investigators will compare information between women who have early stillbirth and those who have a live birth to identify factors associated with stillbirth at less than 28 weeks of pregnancy. The study findings will be disseminated in collaboration with patient organisations using effective ways to reach pregnant women. The investigators anticipate the findings from this study will be included in clinical practice guidelines and rapidly translated into antenatal care.
Early detection of neonates with higher risk of death is quite important for paying more attention to these cases, timely referral to tertiary neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), and provision of meticulous critical care, which ultimately may improve outcomes. Several scoring systems have recently been developed for assessment of the intensity of illness and prognosticate the risk of not only neonatal mortality but also short- and long-term morbidities. The accuracy of these scoring systems has been investigated in several NICUs from different countries, such as USA, UK, Canada, Brazil, India, and Iran. Previous Egyptian studies have investigated the accuracy of Clinical Risk Index for Babies II (CRIB II), Score for Neonatal Acute Physiology II (SNAP-II) and its Perinatal Extension II (SNAPPE-II). However, the accuracy of Sensorium, temperature, oxygenation, perfusion, skin color, and blood sugar (STOPS), Modified Sick neonatal Score (MSNS), and neonatal sequential organ failure assessment (nSOFA) has not been investigated in Egyptian NICUs. Therefore, more studies are required to investigate the utility and accuracy of neonatal risk assessment scores in Egyptian NICUs.
Implement surfactant (BLES®) replacement therapy using the Less Invasive Surfactant Administration technique in six tertiary institutions in Nigeria and evaluate its impact on 72-hour neonatal mortality in premature infants born less than 2000 grams at birth.
A Cochrane systematic review has confirmed that fetal exposure to magnesium sulphate given before preterm birth has a neuroprotective role. This review also showed a significant reduction in the rate of gross motor dysfunction in early childhood. Early Preterm birth (< 34+0 weeks) and very low birthweight (< 1,500 g) are the principal risk factors for cerebral palsy. Multiple pregnancy accounts for over 10% of preterm births and has a higher incidence of cerebral palsy than singleton pregnancy (twins have 7 times and triplets 47 times the risk of cerebral palsy compared with singletons).
The evidence is required to assess the effectiveness of enhanced delivery and newborn kits as compared to standard delivery kits in the flood affected districts that can increase the utilization of services and reduce the delays that are responsible for poor maternal and newborn health through LHW program.
Neonatal mortality (defined as death in the first 28 days of life) remains unacceptably high in sub-Sarahan Africa. The concentrated risk of neonatal illness in the first weeks of life and its potential to rapidly deteriorate means that expanding mothers' access to timely information and support during this period is critical to reducing neonatal mortality. This cluster-randomized control trial aims to integrate a 2 way interactive SMS text messaging intervention into existing digital infrastructure supporting Community Health Volunteer (CHV) workflow in Western Kenya (dCHT) to enable remote communication by mothers with CHVs between home visits.
Neonatal mortality remains unacceptably high. Globally, the majority of mothers now deliver in health facilities in low resource settings where quality of newborn care is poor. Health systems strengthening through digitial quality improvement systems, such as the Neotree, are a potential solution. The overarching aim of this study is to complete the co-development of NeoTree-gamma with key functionalities configured, operationalised, tested and ready for large scale roll out across low resource settings. Specific study objectives are as follows: 1. To further develop and test the NeoTree at tertiary facilities in Malawi and Zimbabwe 2. To investigate HCPs and parent/carer view of the NeoTree, including how acceptable and usable HCWs find the app, and potential barriers and enablers to implementing/using it in practice. 3. To collect outcome data for newborns from representative sites where NeoTree is not implemented. 4. To test the clinical validity of key NeoTree diagnostic algorithms, e.g. neonatal sepsis and hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) against gold standard or best available standard diagnoses. 5. To add dashboards and data linkage to the functionality of the NeoTree 6. To develop and test proof of concept for communicating daily electronic medical records (EMR) using NeoTree 7. To initiate a multi-country network of newborn health care workers, policy makers and academics. 8. To estimate cost of implementing NeoTree at all sites and potential costs at scale