Background Neonatal jaundice is a common and usually harmless condition, but 10% of cases can progress to severe forms that can cause irreversible brain damage or death if undetected and untreated. The prevalence of severe cases is higher in resource-limited settings due to limited access to reliable detection methods among other contributing factors. Objective To assess the feasibility of implementing Picterus Jaundice Pro, a smartphone-based detection tool for neonatal jaundice, in a resource-limited Mexican healthcare setting. Methods A mixed-methods approach was employed, integrating a pragmatic randomised controlled trial (RCT) with qualitative insights from semi-structured interviews, all conducted within a feasibility framework. In the RCT, newborns were randomly assigned to screening by visual assessment alone (control) or visual assessment plus Picterus Jaundice Pro (intervention). Feasibility outcomes included RCT-derived measures – the proportion of positive screenings, successful referrals to emergency room (bilirubin ≥14.6 mg/dL 250 µmol/L), jaundice management needed and jaundice management received. Recruitment capability, device practicality, integration, acceptability and protocol adherence were also assessed. Results From January to June 2024, 542 newborns were included (273 control, 269 intervention). Compared with control, the intervention arm showed higher proportions (proportional difference 95% CI) in positive screenings (0.299 0.230 to 0.362), successful referrals (0.112 0.058 to 0.166), jaundice management needed (0.045 0.008 to 0.082), and jaundice management received (0.038 0.003 to 0.072). Interviewed participants considered Picterus Jaundice Pro user-friendly and well-integrated into workflows. Despite high protocol adherence, incomplete referrals due to logistical barriers and low perceived risk by parents occurred in 11% of cases. Conclusions Implementing Picterus Jaundice Pro yielded encouraging improvements in screening practices, underscoring its potential to advance neonatal care. Addressing systemic barriers and raising awareness among parents and healthcare workers is crucial for maximizing impact. Trial registration number NCT06073444
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Gabriela Jiménez-Díaz
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Jesús Elizarrarás-Rivas
Mexican Social Security Institute
Martina Keitsch
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
BMJ Paediatrics Open
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
St Olav's University Hospital
Mexican Social Security Institute
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jiménez-Díaz et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d0ae94659487ece0fa47ea — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2025-003624
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: