Woodd, S, Graham, W, Campbell, O, Mulokozi, A and Manzi, F. 2021. Infection Surveillance by Telephone, Early Postpartum (I-STEP). [Online]. Ifakara Health Institute, Ifakara, Tanzania. Available from: https://data.ihi.or.tz/index.php/catalog/179/
Woodd, S, Graham, W, Campbell, O, Mulokozi, A and Manzi, F. Infection Surveillance by Telephone, Early Postpartum (I-STEP) [Internet]. Ifakara Health Institute; 2021. Available from: https://data.ihi.or.tz/index.php/catalog/179/
Woodd, S, Graham, W, Campbell, O, Mulokozi, A and Manzi, F (2021). Infection Surveillance by Telephone, Early Postpartum (I-STEP). [Data Collection]. Ifakara Health Institute, Ifakara, Tanzania. https://data.ihi.or.tz/index.php/catalog/179/
Description
Maternal and newborn infections are important causes of mortality but morbidity data from low- and middle-income countries is limited. We used telephone surveillance to estimate infection incidence and risk factors in women and newborns following hospital childbirth in Dar es Salaam
We recruited postnatal women from two tertiary hospitals and conducted telephone interviews 7 and 28 days after delivery. Maternal infection (endometritis, caesarean or perineal wound, or urinary tract infection) and newborn infection (umbilical cord or possible severe bacterial infection) were identified using hospital case-notes at the time of birth and self-reported symptoms. Adjusted Cox regression models were used to assess the association between potential risk-factors and infection.
We recruited 879 women and interviewed 791 (90%). From day 0-7, 6.7% (49/791) women and 6.2% (51/762) newborns developed infection. Using full follow-up data, the infection rate was higher in women with caesarean childbirth versus women with a vaginal delivery (aHR 1.93, 95%CI 1.11-3.36). Only 24% of women received pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis before caesarean section. Infection was higher in newborns resuscitated at birth versus newborns who were not resuscitated (aHR 4.45, 95%CI 2.10-9.44). At interview, 66% (37/56) of women and 88% (72/82) of newborns with possible infection had sought health-facility care. Telephone surveillance identified a substantial risk of postnatal infection, including cases likely to have been missed by hospital-based data-collection alone. Risk of maternal endometritis and newborn possible severe bacterial infection were consistent with other studies. Caesarean section was the most important risk-factor for maternal infection. Improved implementation of pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis is urgently required to mitigate this risk.
Data capture method | Questionnaire: Interactive | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Data Collection Period |
|
||||||||
Date (Date published in a 3rd party system) | 17 June 2021 | ||||||||
Geographical area covered (offline during plugin upgrade) |
|
||||||||
Language(s) of written materials | English |
Data Creators | Woodd, S, Graham, W, Campbell, O, Mulokozi, A and Manzi, F |
---|---|
LSHTM Faculty/Department | Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology |
Research Centre | Centre for Maternal, Reproductive and Child Health (MARCH) |
Participating Institutions | London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom, Ifakara Health Institute, Ifakara, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania |
Funders |
|
---|
Date Deposited | 06 May 2022 13:51 |
---|---|
Last Modified | 11 May 2022 10:14 |
Publisher | Ifakara Health Institute |