London. The past decade has seen great advances in child survival, but while toddlers and small children are benefiting, the death rate for new-born babies remains stubbornly high. Now a new report suggests that paying more attention to their mothers’ health, and focusing on certain damaging but treatable diseases, could be one key to tackling neonatal mortality.
The traditional childhood killers - measles,  pneumonia and diarrhoea - are all down; even where malaria is still  rife, treated bednets are saving children’s lives. But as deaths from  other causes drop, mortality in the first month of life looms ever  larger.
Statistics published recently by researchers at  Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore show that, worldwide, around 40  per cent of children who die below the age of five die in the first  month of life, and that rises to 50 per cent or more in regions like  Europe and South East Asia where other causes of childhood death have  been reduced.
Many of these babies were born too soon, or born  too small; others were born with infections contracted from their  mothers. In all these cases it is the mother’s health during pregnancy  which is the key to the babies’ survival, and now the American Medical  Association has published a study of the incidence in pregnant women of  health problems which are known to affect their unborn babies, and which  can all be treated.
The researchers looked at 171 studies from  Sub-Saharan Africa over a 20-year period, which showed whether women  attending ante-natal clinics were infected with malaria, or with a range  of sexually transmitted and reproductive tract infections - syphilis,  gonorrhoea, chlamydia and bacterial and parasitic infections of the  vagina. If left untreated, these can lead to miscarriages, stillbirths,  premature births and low birth-weight babies.
Matthew Chico, a research fellow at the London  School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who led the team, stresses the  far-reaching effects of these problems. In malaria, for instance, the  placenta does not function properly. “What you end up with,” he told  IRIN, “is a low birth-weight baby, and low birth weight is the single  most common factor in neonatal mortality. And it leads to lifelong  consequences. Low birth-weight babies underperform at school and end up  earning less, and curiously they even end up with more cardiovascular  problems later in life.
“There are multiple consequences. Girls are at  greater risk, for instance, of having low birth-weight babies themselves  and so it continues into the next generation. We have to break the  cycle.”
Chico and his colleagues divided the continent  into two regions - East and Southern Africa, and West and Central  Africa, because of the way the higher incidence of HIV/Aids in Southern  Africa might affect the results. They also excluded South Africa,  because malaria was a major part of the study, and malaria there has  been reduced to the point where it is no longer an issue.
What they found was alarming. The incidence of  syphilis and gonorrhoea was relatively low, under 5 per cent, and the  most recent figures show them on the decline. But in East and Southern  Africa more than half the women attending antenatal clinics tested  positive for bacterial vaginal infection and more than a quarter had the  parasitic infection, trichomonas.
These figures were a little lower in West and  Central Africa, but those areas had a higher rate of malaria infection,  around 40 per cent, although this had reduced a little in more recent  studies, an indication perhaps that the promotion of bednets for  pregnant women has had an effect.
The averages conceal considerable variations from  place to place, with one set of figures from Blantyre, Malawi, showing  more than 85 per cent of women had a bacterial vaginal infection and  another, from Ngali in Cameroon, reporting that almost 95 per cent of  women there were infected with malaria.
So what can be done? Effective treatment could  make a major dent in neonatal mortality. “It’s been established that  universal coverage with preventive treatment for malaria would reduce  neonatal mortality by a third,” says Chico. “So add to that an STI  [sexually transmitted infection] and RTI [reproductive tract infection]  component and the reduction could certainly be more than that.”
The good news is that all these conditions are treatable. It is  just a question of finding the best way to reach these women, many of  whom will have no symptoms and be unaware they are infected. The current  treatment regime is to give all pregnant women preventive treatment for  malaria using Fansidar (sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine). But growing  resistance to the drug means this is less effective than it used to be.
One possibility is to do a blood test for malaria  at each antenatal visit, and only give treatment if the test is  positive. “The screen and treat approach minimizes drug use,” Chico told  IRIN, “and that would minimize drug resistance. But the test doesn’t  show if the placenta is infected, which is what affects the unborn baby,  and this approach doesn’t give protection against sexually transmitted  infections.
“Or else you could use a preventive combination  therapy with an antimalarial plus azithromycin, which is primarily an  antibiotic and will act against the other infections, but also has some  antimalarial properties. Many doctors don’t like to give a pregnant a  woman any drug unless they are sure she needs it, but in this case the  alternative is much more grave.
“What we need now are studies to compare the  alternative treatments in similar populations. Only then will we know  what path to follow.” (IRIN)
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