Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance

Objective: Neonatal resuscitation has evolved over the last three decades from word of mouth teachings to organised methods. Resuscitation efforts are geared towards mitigating the adverse sequalae of perinatal asphyxia.  To evaluate the cognitive knowledge of  health workers primarily involved in c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: AU Solarin, OA Olutekunbi, J Renner, SO Akodu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Babcock Medical Society 2015-06-01
Series:Babcock University Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/11
id doaj-fd62b42c87c142fa8d360643ecce2b39
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fd62b42c87c142fa8d360643ecce2b392021-10-10T20:35:58ZengBabcock Medical SocietyBabcock University Medical Journal2465-66662756-46572015-06-0112354110.38029/bumj.v1i2.1111Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenanceAU SolarinOA OlutekunbiJ RennerSO AkoduObjective: Neonatal resuscitation has evolved over the last three decades from word of mouth teachings to organised methods. Resuscitation efforts are geared towards mitigating the adverse sequalae of perinatal asphyxia.  To evaluate the cognitive knowledge of  health workers primarily involved in care of newborn on neonatal resuscitation and document the effects neonatal resuscitation training course have on improving the knowledge of health workers. Method: Standardized pre-test and post-test as used by American Academy of Pediatrics and American Heart Association (AAP/AHA) were administered to the health workers who participated in the neonatal resuscitation training course. Nurses and doctors were from three key departments- Paediatrics, Anaesthesia and, Obstetrics and Gynaecology. The pass mark was set at a cut-off score of ≥ 70%.  Results: Thirty health workers participated in the neonatal resuscitation course. 70% of them were nurses while 30% were doctors. 70% of the participants were from the department of paediatrics while participants from Anaesthesia and Obstetrics and Gynaecology accounted for 16.7% and 13.3% respectively. The mean pre-test and post-test scores among all participants were 40.65±18.05 and 68.00±16.36 respectively (p< 0.001). Participants from paediatrics performed better than other specialties (p <0.001). Conclusion: There is an obvious knowledge gap among health workers directly involved in the care of the new born. Neonatal resuscitation training courses and regular retraining can bridge this gap in knowledge.https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/11perinatal asphyxianeonatal resuscitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author AU Solarin
OA Olutekunbi
J Renner
SO Akodu
spellingShingle AU Solarin
OA Olutekunbi
J Renner
SO Akodu
Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
Babcock University Medical Journal
perinatal asphyxia
neonatal resuscitation
author_facet AU Solarin
OA Olutekunbi
J Renner
SO Akodu
author_sort AU Solarin
title Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
title_short Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
title_full Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
title_fullStr Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
title_full_unstemmed Neonatal Resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in Nigeria: Knowledge gap among Health workers and need for sustenance
title_sort neonatal resuscitation at a privately owned tertiary hospital in nigeria: knowledge gap among health workers and need for sustenance
publisher Babcock Medical Society
series Babcock University Medical Journal
issn 2465-6666
2756-4657
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Objective: Neonatal resuscitation has evolved over the last three decades from word of mouth teachings to organised methods. Resuscitation efforts are geared towards mitigating the adverse sequalae of perinatal asphyxia.  To evaluate the cognitive knowledge of  health workers primarily involved in care of newborn on neonatal resuscitation and document the effects neonatal resuscitation training course have on improving the knowledge of health workers. Method: Standardized pre-test and post-test as used by American Academy of Pediatrics and American Heart Association (AAP/AHA) were administered to the health workers who participated in the neonatal resuscitation training course. Nurses and doctors were from three key departments- Paediatrics, Anaesthesia and, Obstetrics and Gynaecology. The pass mark was set at a cut-off score of ≥ 70%.  Results: Thirty health workers participated in the neonatal resuscitation course. 70% of them were nurses while 30% were doctors. 70% of the participants were from the department of paediatrics while participants from Anaesthesia and Obstetrics and Gynaecology accounted for 16.7% and 13.3% respectively. The mean pre-test and post-test scores among all participants were 40.65±18.05 and 68.00±16.36 respectively (p< 0.001). Participants from paediatrics performed better than other specialties (p <0.001). Conclusion: There is an obvious knowledge gap among health workers directly involved in the care of the new born. Neonatal resuscitation training courses and regular retraining can bridge this gap in knowledge.
topic perinatal asphyxia
neonatal resuscitation
url https://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/11
work_keys_str_mv AT ausolarin neonatalresuscitationataprivatelyownedtertiaryhospitalinnigeriaknowledgegapamonghealthworkersandneedforsustenance
AT oaolutekunbi neonatalresuscitationataprivatelyownedtertiaryhospitalinnigeriaknowledgegapamonghealthworkersandneedforsustenance
AT jrenner neonatalresuscitationataprivatelyownedtertiaryhospitalinnigeriaknowledgegapamonghealthworkersandneedforsustenance
AT soakodu neonatalresuscitationataprivatelyownedtertiaryhospitalinnigeriaknowledgegapamonghealthworkersandneedforsustenance
_version_ 1716829319198670848