Neonatal Sepsis at Neonatal Intensive Care Units in Ghana
NCT ID: NCT03755635
Last Updated: 2021-10-11
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
5433 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-10-01
2019-09-30
Brief Summary
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Aim: To study the epidemiology of neonatal sepsis and evaluate the effect of multimodal infection control interventions on the incidence of neonatal sepsis; and colonization by multidrug resistant Gram negative bacteria (MDRGNB).
Methods: A controlled before and after interventional trial comprising a 7 month pre- intervention phase, 5 month intervention phase and 7 month post-intervention phase. Neonates admitted at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital (KBTH) will be enrolled prospectively and followed up for diagnosis of sepsis and outcome of admission. This will be used to describe the epidemiology of neonatal sepsis. Swabs will be collected from a subpopulation of included neonates at intervention site (KBTH) and control site (37 Military Hospital) NICUs to assess colonization of neonates with MDRGNB. Environmental swabs will be collected from surfaces at the NICU to assess MDRGNB contamination of the environment. The intervention comprises infection prevention strategies including implementation of the WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy. The primary endpoint is incidence of neonatal sepsis.
Expected Outcome: This study will contribute to improved infection prevention practices in the participating NICUs and highlight lessons which other national and regional NICUs may learn from.
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Detailed Description
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Transmission of MDR bacteria in the hospital environment is thought to be due to unhygienic practices which occur during clinical invasive procedures, (e.g. artificial ventilation, catheter and intravenous line insertion). Neonatal infections may also be due to invasion by colonizing bacteria of the neonate, usually originating from maternal and environmental flora.
According to the WHO, 50% of HAIs are preventable through implementation of infection control practices. The WHO has instituted a multimodal hand hygiene strategy that has been found to improve hand hygiene compliance and reduce the prevalence of HAIs. However, the effectiveness of this strategy in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) with high risk of colonization with environmental bacteria has not been studied. In fact, most studies that have examined the potential sources and mode of transmission of organisms that cause neonatal sepsis have been conducted in well-resourced countries.
The hypothesis of the study is that the hospital environment serves as a source of MDR Gram negative bacteria responsible for neonatal colonization and sepsis among patients admitted at the NICU of the KBTH; and that implementation of the multimodal hand hygiene strategy will lead to a reduction in the incidence of neonatal sepsis and colonization by MDR Gram negative bacteria.
Objective To determine the impact of multi-modal infection control interventions on the incidence of neonatal sepsis and colonization by MDR Gram negative bacteria.
Method This study will evaluate the impact of WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy on the incidence of neonatal sepsis and neonatal colonization by MDR Gram negative bacteria as well as pilot surveillance of neonatal sepsis at the participating sites.
Study setting: Data will be collected at the NICU of the KBTH and the 37 Military Hospital, Accra, Ghana.
Study Design: The study will be a controlled before and after interventional trial with one interventional site (KBTH) and a control site (37 Military hospital). Data will be collected over 19 months with a baseline phase of 7 months; an interventional phase of 5 months; and a post intervention phase of 7 months.
Intervention: The WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy comprises five essential elements; system change-availability of alcohol-based hand rub at the point of care and/ or access to safe continuous water supply and soap and towels; training and education of healthcare professionals; monitoring of hand hygiene practices and performance feedback; reminders in the workplace; and the creation of a handhygiene safety culture with the participation of both individual healthcare workers and senior hospital managers.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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Standard of care
Continuously monitoring of neonatal sepsis under standard of care at one site
No interventions assigned to this group
Hand hygiene
The WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy is implemented at one site
The WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy
Comprises five essential elements; system change-availability of alcohol-based hand rub at the point of care and/ or access to safe continuous water supply and soap and towels; training and education of healthcare professionals; monitoring of hand hygiene practices and performance feedback; reminders in the workplace; and the creation of a hand hygiene safety culture with the participation of both individual healthcare workers and senior hospital managers.
Interventions
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The WHO multimodal hand hygiene strategy
Comprises five essential elements; system change-availability of alcohol-based hand rub at the point of care and/ or access to safe continuous water supply and soap and towels; training and education of healthcare professionals; monitoring of hand hygiene practices and performance feedback; reminders in the workplace; and the creation of a hand hygiene safety culture with the participation of both individual healthcare workers and senior hospital managers.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Birth weight ≥750 Grams
* ≤48 hours of age at time of enrolment
* Consent to participate obtained from legal guardian
Exclusion Criteria
* Neonates who have undergone surgical procedure
1 Minute
48 Hours
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Copenhagen
OTHER
Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra, Ghana
OTHER
Rigshospitalet, Denmark
OTHER
University of Ghana
OTHER
Stephanie Bjerrum
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Stephanie Bjerrum
MD, PHD, postdoc
Principal Investigators
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Appiah Korang Labi, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of Int. Health and Immunlogy Microbiology, University og Copenhagen
Jørgen Kurtzhals, Professor
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Department of Int. Health and Immunlogy Microbiology, University og Copenhagen
Locations
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Korle Bu Teaching Hospital
Accra, , Ghana
Countries
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References
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Labi AK, Enweronu-Laryea CC, Nartey ET, Bjerrum S, Ayibor PK, Andersen LP, Newman MJ, Kurtzhals JAL. Bloodstream Infections at Two Neonatal Intensive Care Units in Ghana: Multidrug Resistant Enterobacterales Undermine the Usefulness of Standard Antibiotic Regimes. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2021 Dec 1;40(12):1115-1121. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000003284.
Other Identifiers
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UM ID: 892333
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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