Prevalence of hypoxemia among sick children, aged under-five years, seeking healthcare at primary health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, India: an observational-cohort study
Shally Awasthi, Divas Kumar, Anuj Kumar Pandey, Girdhar Gopal Agarwal, Anmol Jacob, Kovid Sharma, Monika Agarwal, Hélène Langet, Gaurav Kumar, Gillian A. Levine, Silvia Cicconi, Michael Ruffo, Mira Emmanuel-Fabula, Fenella Beynon, Fabian Schär, Kaspar Wyss, Valérie D'Acremont

TL;DR
This study finds that hypoxemia is rare in sick children under five in rural India, but few are referred for proper care, highlighting gaps in healthcare systems.
Contribution
The study provides new data on hypoxemia prevalence and referral practices in rural primary health facilities in Uttar Pradesh.
Findings
Hypoxemia prevalence was 1.3% among sick children under five in rural health facilities.
Only 20.3% of hypoxemic children completed referrals to higher facilities.
Mortality was significantly higher in hypoxemic children compared to non-hypoxemic ones.
Abstract
Hypoxemia or low blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) increases risk of mortality in children aged under-five years. Integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illness guidelines in India recommend referral to higher centre at SpO2 <90%. The primary objective was to assess prevalence of hypoxemia among sick under-five, seeking healthcare at rural primary health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, India. Secondary objective assessed completion of referral (defined as reaching higher referral facilities) in hypoxemic children by day-7. Secondary data analyses from pulse oximetry (POx) arm of a cluster randomized trial. Hypoxemia, defined as SpO2 <94%, was assessed on day-0 and completion of referral through telephonic follow-up on day-7 (+2 days). Severe hypoxemia was defined as SpO2 <90%. Registration number: CTRI/2022/03/041325. From 20-June-2022 to 21-April-2023, 24,966 children were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Global Health and Epidemiology
