TY - JOUR T1 - Staged implementation of a two-tiered hospital-based neonatal care package in a resource-limited setting in Eastern Uganda JF - BMJ Global Health DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000586 VL - 3 IS - 1 SP - e000586 AU - Kathy Burgoine AU - Juliet Ikiror AU - Sylivia Akol AU - Margaret Kakai AU - Sara Talyewoya AU - Alex Sande AU - Tom Otim AU - Francis Okello AU - Adam Hewitt-Smith AU - Peter Olupot-Olupot Y1 - 2018/02/01 UR - http://gh.bmj.com/content/3/1/e000586.abstract N2 - Neonatal mortality remains a major global challenge. Most neonatal deaths occur in low-income countries, but it is estimated that over two-thirds of these deaths could be prevented if achievable interventions are scaled up. To date, initiatives have focused on community and obstetric interventions, and there has been limited simultaneous drive to improve neonatal care in the health facilities where the sick neonates are being referred. Few data exist on the process of implementing of neonatal care packages and their impact. Evidence-based guidelines for neonatal care in health facilities in low-resource settings and direction on how to achieve these standards of neonatal care are therefore urgently needed. We used the WHO-Recommended Quality of Care Framework to build a strategy for quality improvement of neonatal care in a busy government hospital in Eastern Uganda. Twelve key interventions were designed to improve infrastructure, equipment, protocols and training to provide two levels of neonatal care. We implemented this low-cost, hospital-based neonatal care package over an 18-month period. This data-driven analysis paper illustrates how simple changes in practice, provision of basic equipment and protocols, ongoing training and dedicated neonatal staff can reduce neonatal mortality substantially even without specialist equipment. Neonatal mortality decreased from 48% to 40% (P=0.25) after level 1 care was implemented and dropped further to 21% (P<0.01) with level 2 care. In our experience, a dramatic impact on neonatal mortality can be made through modest and cost-effective interventions. We recommend that stakeholders seeking to improve neonatal care in low-resource settings adopt a similar approach. ER -