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Setting research priorities to improve global newborn health and prevent stillbirths by 2025.

Authors :
Yoshida S
Martines J
Lawn JE
Wall S
Souza JP
Rudan I
Cousens S
Aaby P
Adam I
Adhikari RK
Ambalavanan N
Arifeen SE
Aryal DR
Asiruddin S
Baqui A
Barros AJ
Benn CS
Bhandari V
Bhatnagar S
Bhattacharya S
Bhutta ZA
Black RE
Blencowe H
Bose C
Brown J
Bührer C
Carlo W
Cecatti JG
Cheung PY
Clark R
Colbourn T
Conde-Agudelo A
Corbett E
Czeizel AE
Das A
Day LT
Deal C
Deorari A
Dilmen U
English M
Engmann C
Esamai F
Fall C
Ferriero DM
Gisore P
Hazir T
Higgins RD
Homer CS
Hoque DE
Irgens L
Islam MT
de Graft-Johnson J
Joshua MA
Keenan W
Khatoon S
Kieler H
Kramer MS
Lackritz EM
Lavender T
Lawintono L
Luhanga R
Marsh D
McMillan D
McNamara PJ
Mol BW
Molyneux E
Mukasa GK
Mutabazi M
Nacul LC
Nakakeeto M
Narayanan I
Olusanya B
Osrin D
Paul V
Poets C
Reddy UM
Santosham M
Sayed R
Schlabritz-Loutsevitch NE
Singhal N
Smith MA
Smith PG
Soofi S
Spong CY
Sultana S
Tshefu A
van Bel F
Gray LV
Waiswa P
Wang W
Williams SL
Wright L
Zaidi A
Zhang Y
Zhong N
Zuniga I
Bahl R
Source :
Journal of global health [J Glob Health] 2016 Jun; Vol. 6 (1), pp. 010508.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: In 2013, an estimated 2.8 million newborns died and 2.7 million were stillborn. A much greater number suffer from long term impairment associated with preterm birth, intrauterine growth restriction, congenital anomalies, and perinatal or infectious causes. With the approaching deadline for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2015, there was a need to set the new research priorities on newborns and stillbirth with a focus not only on survival but also on health, growth and development. We therefore carried out a systematic exercise to set newborn health research priorities for 2013-2025.<br />Methods: We used adapted Child Health and Nutrition Research Initiative (CHNRI) methods for this prioritization exercise. We identified and approached the 200 most productive researchers and 400 program experts, and 132 of them submitted research questions online. These were collated into a set of 205 research questions, sent for scoring to the 600 identified experts, and were assessed and scored by 91 experts.<br />Results: Nine out of top ten identified priorities were in the domain of research on improving delivery of known interventions, with simplified neonatal resuscitation program and clinical algorithms and improved skills of community health workers leading the list. The top 10 priorities in the domain of development were led by ideas on improved Kangaroo Mother Care at community level, how to improve the accuracy of diagnosis by community health workers, and perinatal audits. The 10 leading priorities for discovery research focused on stable surfactant with novel modes of administration for preterm babies, ability to diagnose fetal distress and novel tocolytic agents to delay or stop preterm labour.<br />Conclusion: These findings will assist both donors and researchers in supporting and conducting research to close the knowledge gaps for reducing neonatal mortality, morbidity and long term impairment. WHO, SNL and other partners will work to generate interest among key national stakeholders, governments, NGOs, and research institutes in these priorities, while encouraging research funders to support them. We will track research funding, relevant requests for proposals and trial registers to monitor if the priorities identified by this exercise are being addressed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2047-2978
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of global health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26401272
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7189/jogh.06.010508