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Identifying infants who might benefit from routine measurement of bilirubin during first 48-72 hours of life
EDITOR In the United Kingdom all newborn infants and mothers can be visited at
home regularly by community midwives during the first seven days after
discharge. These health professionals are skilled in infant capillary
blood sampling and often measure serum bilirubin concentrations as part
of their care of mother and infant. The potential clearly exists for
possible screening of infants at risk of hyperbilirubinaemia after
discharge, but such screening would have to be carefully targeted to
avoid an unacceptable increase in workload.
We retrospectively reviewed the casenotes of all infants of The mean age at admission of infants from the postnatal wards was 59.8 hours and from the community 109.5 hours (two sample unpaired
t test, P=0.0004). Mean serum bilirubin concentration was 396.6 µmol/l (range 340-479) and 435.9 µmol/l (range 354-768) respectively. Of the 11 infants from the postnatal wards, eight had ABO
incompatibility, two physiological jaundice, and one
cephalhaematoma. Of the 10 from the community, three had glucose
6-phosphate dehydrodgenase deficiency, two ABO incompatibility, four
physiological jaundice, and one the Crigler-Najar syndrome.
Although based on small numbers, our survey shows that infants who
might benefit from routine measurement of serum bilirubin concentration
during the first 48-72 hours of life include those of Asian and African
or Caribbean ethnic groups and those from groups with a high prevalence
of glucose 6-phosphate deficiency. This may result in the earlier
detection of clinically significant neonatal jaundice in most cases.
The observation reported by Spurgeon of an increased
likelihood of readmission with jaundice after earlier neonatal discharge is well made.1 Lee et al showed that jaundice
and dehydration were more severe in newborn infants requiring
readmission to hospital after the mean age at discharge fell from 4.5 to 2.7 days,2 while Maisels and Kring found a
significantly increased risk for readmission with jaundice among
newborn infants discharged from hospital before 72 hours of
age.3
37
weeks' gestation who had been admitted over three years to the
neonatal intensive care unit at an inner city district hospital with
clinically significant jaundice (serum bilirubin >340 µmol/l). Altogether 21 such patients were admitted (mean age 83.5 hours; mean
serum bilirubin concentration 415.3 µmol/l (range 340-768)). Eleven
were admitted from postnatal wards and 10 from the community. The
diagnosis was glucose 6-phosphate dehydrodgenase deficiency in three
cases, ABO incompatibility in 10, physiological (including breast milk)
jaundice in six, cephalhaematoma in one, and the Crigler-Najar syndrome
in one. One infant was white, nine were Asian, and 10 African or
Caribbean; one infant was of mixed Asian and Caribbean parentage.
Hope Hospital, Salford M6 8HD mitchell.simon{at}virgin.net
Narad Mathura
Department of Paediatrics, City Hospital, Birmingham B18 7QH
| 1. |
Spurgeon D.
Earlier discharge for newborns may increase health risks.
BMJ
1999;
319:
469 |
| 2. | Lee KS, Perlman M, Ballantyne M, Elliott I, To T. Association between duration of neonatal stay and readmission rate. J Pediatr 1995; 127: 758-766[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 3. |
Maisels MJ, Kring E.
Length of stay, jaundice and hospital readmission.
Pediatrics
1998;
101:
995-998 |
Hyperbilirubinaemia is a marker for inadequate breast feeding
EDITOR New mothers who lack support are prone to postpartum sadness and
problems with breast feeding. Hyperbilirubinaemia is a marker for
inadequate breastfeeding.
2 3
There may be nothing wrong with sending women home early from hospital, so long as they have help
at home from the community until breast feeding is well established and
their confidence is strong.
Nleeguitar{at}aol.com
The study reported by Spurgeon found that the most common reason
for neonatal readmission was hyperbilirubinaemia and that readmission
rates had increased since hospital stay after delivery had
decreased.1 Perhaps this reflects a lack of community health services and support for new mothers. In the United States women
are often discharged to little or no help at home. Their husband (if
they have one) or their mother might be able to take a week off work to
help, but that is all. They might receive one visit from a nurse during
the first week. This is not enough. Other cultures offer months of
support after delivery. This support can come from female relatives (as
in Sierra Leone) or healthcare professionals (Plunkett nurses in New Zealand).
Center for Breastfeeding, 8 Jan Sebastian Way, Number 13, Sanwich, MA 02563, USA
1.
Spurgeon D.
Earlier discharge for newborns may increase health risks.
BMJ
1999;
319:
469. (21 August.)
2.
DeCarvalho M, Klaus M, Merkatz R.
Frequency of breast-feeding and serum bilirubin concentration.
Am Dis Child
1982;
136:
737-738.
3.
Yamauchi Y, Yamanouchi I.
Breast-feeding frequency during the first 24 hours after birth in full-term neonates.
Pediatrics
1990;
86:
171-175
© BMJ 2000