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Background Admission hypothermia is still an underappreciated major challenge for new-born survival in low-resource settings. The WHO recommends skin-to-skin contact as the simplest and safest way for maintaining the body temperature even during transportation. Quality improvement initiatives for hospitalised new-borns have shown benefits like a reduction in neonatal morbidity and mortality. This study was undertaken in a resource-constrained public hospital in southern India with an aim to reduce neonatal hypothermia at admission to 25˚C, transportation by the kangaroo method, and a portable infant warmer (PIW) were implemented in three successive Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Result In the third PDSA cycle, the mean admission temperature (36.51˚C ±0.82) was significantly (p<0.0001) higher when compared with the baseline phase (35.41˚C ±1.09), and there was a significant (p<0.001) reduction in hypothermia (33.33%). The aim was achieved in the last two weeks of the third cycle with a reduction in hypothermia to 17.6%. Conclusion Implementation of appropriate thermoregulatory practices and low-cost strategies like the kangaroo method and PIW using quality improvement methodology significantly reduced admission hypothermia.
Pratik et al. (Mon,) studied this question.