Global trends of neonatal, infant and child mortality: implications for child survival 
By:Dr KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI & Dr S.K CHATURVEDI
When are child deaths occurring? 
What are under-fives dying of? 
(excluding neonatal causes of death)  
 
    * Pneumonia 
    * Diarrhoea
    * Malaria
    * Measles
    * HIV/AIDS
Malnutrition contributes to more than half of all under-five deaths
What are neonates dying of?  
    * Preterm births 
    * Severe infection
    * Asphyxia
    * Congenital anomalies
    * Tetanus
INDIA’S SHARE OF GLOBAL BURDEN  
SOLUTIONS EXIST 
    * A mix of community and facility-based interventions
    * A mix of integrated child health approaches
    * Integrated management of neonatal and child hood illnesses is proven tool
Goals of IMNCI 
    * Standardized case management of sick newborns and children
    * Focus on the most common causes of mortality
    * Nutrition assessment and counselling for all sick infants and children
    * Home care for newborns to
          o promote exclusive breastfeeding
          o prevent hypothermia
          o improve illness recognition & timely care seeking
Essential components of IMNCI 
    * Improve health and nutrition workers’ skills
    * Improve health systems
    * Improve family and community practices
Home visits for young infants: Schedule 
Colour Coded Case Management Strategy 
Other innovations in case  
Innovations in therapy 
    * Single daily dose gentamycin
    * How to treat at home when hospital admission is not feasible
    * Counselling the mother to give oral drugs at home
    * Clear recommendations for follow up
    * Negotiated feeding counselling
What does IMNCI not provide at all or fully 
    * Antenatal care
    * Skilled birth attendance
    * Birth asphyxia management
    * Improved health system management
    * What can be rapidly added to IMNCI
    * Inpatient care modules for first level referral hospitals
IMNCI Experience--Milestones 
    * Early 2002, GOI constituted an Adaptation Group
    * In joint GOI-UNICEF review meeting in April 2002 GOI requested to experiment IMNCI in BDCS districts
    * July 2002, First national 2 days planning meeting
    * December 2002, pre-tested 8-days physician course material
    * Early 2003 - adaptation of H&N workers module
    * May 2003 – First field testing in Osmanabad followed by one in Shivpuri & content & methodology frozen
    * Implementation started in Andoor PHC, Osmanabad in June 03 followed by Valsad district
    * Follow-up training of supervisors in April 04 in Osmanabad
    * Field trial for case registers initiated in late 2004
    * Physicians courses from 2005 included community visit, facilitation technique and briefing on Health workers’ course
    * First Facilitation technique course in Orissa in June 2005
Training Flow 
Training: Strengths -- Contents Doable 
Training Limitations: Contents 
Key messages  
    * Maternal and newborn care and support is essential to achieve a substantial reduction in neonatal mortality
    * Improving child survival requires coordinated action between maternal and child health, and other programme areas (e.g. EPI, NUT, RBM, HIV)
    * IMCI is an effective delivery strategy for multiple child survival interventions (India has already incorporated newborn care)
    * For substantive impact, strong community component must accompany the health system strengthening
Global trends of neonatal, infant and child mortality.ppt
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