Antenatal jaundice instruction and acute bilirubin encephalopathy in Nigeria

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Abstract

Background: Acute Bilirubin Encephalopathy (ABE) is common in Nigeria. Parents’ inability to recognize jaundice and delays in seeking care are significant barriers to its prevention. Methods: We compared associations of (1) interactive antenatal maternal jaundice instruction with postnatal reinforcement, (2) standard postnatal instruction, and (3) no maternal instruction with the incidence of ABE among 647 jaundice admissions stratified for risk factors identified in initial descriptive analysis. Results: Eighty-three (83/647;12.8%) admissions developed ABE including eleven jaundice-related deaths. ABE was present at admission in 20/22 (90.9%) if mothers received no jaundice instruction and no antenatal care, 42/182 (23.1%) if received antenatal care but no instruction, 16/95 (16.8%) if received postnatal instruction only, and 4/337 (1.2%) if mothers received both antenatal and postnatal instruction (p

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APA

Wennberg, R. P., Imam, Z. O., Shwe, D. D., Hassan, L., Farouk, Z. L., Turner, L. E., … Oguche, S. (2024). Antenatal jaundice instruction and acute bilirubin encephalopathy in Nigeria. Pediatric Research, 95(5), 1301–1307. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41390-023-02887-6

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