This document discusses HIV and hepatitis C, and how treatment has improved outcomes. It presents two case studies of patients with advanced HIV presenting with opportunistic infections who were successfully treated. It also summarizes research showing that early antiretroviral therapy improves survival for patients with HIV/AIDS or opportunistic infections like PCP, and that cure of hepatitis C through direct-acting antivirals reduces mortality and complications like liver cancer. While treatment access has increased globally, challenges remain in testing and treating all those in need.
This document summarizes the monthly clinical audit activities of the internal medicine department at HFSUH for the month of Sene 2015 E.C. It provides data on outpatient department activities including the regular OPD, MRC, neurology clinic, TB clinic, and ART clinic. It also summarizes inpatient activities in the male/female wards, neurology ward, ICU, and intermediate care ward. Key findings included increased OPD volume, improved chronic case linkage, and decreased number of patients leaving against medical advice. Gaps identified were inadequate equipment and staffing, incomplete documentation, and issues with radiology and laboratory services.
This document discusses maternal morbidity and near-misses, which are defined as life-threatening complications during pregnancy, childbirth, or postpartum that are survived due to medical intervention. It notes that while maternal mortality has declined, morbidity remains high. The document then presents statistics on near-misses from a private and rural hospital in India, finding higher rates in the rural hospital. The most common causes of near-misses were pre-eclampsia/HELLP syndrome and hemorrhage. Improved management of severe complications, emergency protocols, training, and access to care are needed to further reduce maternal mortality and morbidity.
This document discusses severe maternal morbidity, also known as near-misses, which are life-threatening complications during pregnancy, childbirth, or postpartum that women survive only through medical intervention. It notes that over 50 million women experience maternal health issues annually. The document then provides definitions of near-miss cases and discusses risk factors. It presents statistics on near-miss cases from a private hospital in India compared to a rural hospital, finding higher rates in the rural hospital. The leading causes of near-misses are identified as pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and hemorrhage. The conclusion emphasizes the need for improved management of near-miss cases to reduce maternal mortality.
This document provides an annual report on Kuwait's newborn screening program for 2018. It includes statistics on the number of samples received and tested, the screening panel used, positive results, confirmed cases, and performance indicators. A total of 59,655 samples were received in 2018 from various hospitals in Kuwait. Of these, 931 screened positive for various conditions. Further testing confirmed 67 cases across different metabolic disorders and endocrine conditions. Key performance metrics like detection rate, false positive rate, and positive predictive value are provided. The report concludes by thanking the newborn screening team and various doctors for their efforts in the program's success.
This document discusses eclampsia in Sudan. It defines eclampsia as seizures occurring in patients with pre-existing pre-eclampsia. The presentation provides details on diagnosing pre-eclampsia, risk factors, incidence in Sudan, management of severe cases, and prevention. Eclampsia is a major cause of maternal mortality in Sudan, responsible for 14.9% of deaths in 2010. Management involves anticonvulsants like magnesium sulfate, antihypertensives, and preventing future cases through availability of treatments and provider training.
This document summarizes an audit of the management of ectopic pregnancies at a UK trust between 2009-2011. It found that conservative management often did not follow guidelines to only include cases with initial hCG <1000. Methotrexate management mostly adhered to guidelines but some patients required intervention. Surgery remained the most common treatment. Overall compliance with anti-D prophylaxis was 69% but improvements in documentation were needed. The audit recommended increased use of methotrexate and improved clinical pathways to ensure guideline adherence.
This document discusses HIV and hepatitis C, and how treatment has improved outcomes. It presents two case studies of patients with advanced HIV presenting with opportunistic infections who were successfully treated. It also summarizes research showing that early antiretroviral therapy improves survival for patients with HIV/AIDS or opportunistic infections like PCP, and that cure of hepatitis C through direct-acting antivirals reduces mortality and complications like liver cancer. While treatment access has increased globally, challenges remain in testing and treating all those in need.
This document summarizes the monthly clinical audit activities of the internal medicine department at HFSUH for the month of Sene 2015 E.C. It provides data on outpatient department activities including the regular OPD, MRC, neurology clinic, TB clinic, and ART clinic. It also summarizes inpatient activities in the male/female wards, neurology ward, ICU, and intermediate care ward. Key findings included increased OPD volume, improved chronic case linkage, and decreased number of patients leaving against medical advice. Gaps identified were inadequate equipment and staffing, incomplete documentation, and issues with radiology and laboratory services.
This document discusses maternal morbidity and near-misses, which are defined as life-threatening complications during pregnancy, childbirth, or postpartum that are survived due to medical intervention. It notes that while maternal mortality has declined, morbidity remains high. The document then presents statistics on near-misses from a private and rural hospital in India, finding higher rates in the rural hospital. The most common causes of near-misses were pre-eclampsia/HELLP syndrome and hemorrhage. Improved management of severe complications, emergency protocols, training, and access to care are needed to further reduce maternal mortality and morbidity.
This document discusses severe maternal morbidity, also known as near-misses, which are life-threatening complications during pregnancy, childbirth, or postpartum that women survive only through medical intervention. It notes that over 50 million women experience maternal health issues annually. The document then provides definitions of near-miss cases and discusses risk factors. It presents statistics on near-miss cases from a private hospital in India compared to a rural hospital, finding higher rates in the rural hospital. The leading causes of near-misses are identified as pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and hemorrhage. The conclusion emphasizes the need for improved management of near-miss cases to reduce maternal mortality.
This document provides an annual report on Kuwait's newborn screening program for 2018. It includes statistics on the number of samples received and tested, the screening panel used, positive results, confirmed cases, and performance indicators. A total of 59,655 samples were received in 2018 from various hospitals in Kuwait. Of these, 931 screened positive for various conditions. Further testing confirmed 67 cases across different metabolic disorders and endocrine conditions. Key performance metrics like detection rate, false positive rate, and positive predictive value are provided. The report concludes by thanking the newborn screening team and various doctors for their efforts in the program's success.
This document discusses eclampsia in Sudan. It defines eclampsia as seizures occurring in patients with pre-existing pre-eclampsia. The presentation provides details on diagnosing pre-eclampsia, risk factors, incidence in Sudan, management of severe cases, and prevention. Eclampsia is a major cause of maternal mortality in Sudan, responsible for 14.9% of deaths in 2010. Management involves anticonvulsants like magnesium sulfate, antihypertensives, and preventing future cases through availability of treatments and provider training.
This document summarizes an audit of the management of ectopic pregnancies at a UK trust between 2009-2011. It found that conservative management often did not follow guidelines to only include cases with initial hCG <1000. Methotrexate management mostly adhered to guidelines but some patients required intervention. Surgery remained the most common treatment. Overall compliance with anti-D prophylaxis was 69% but improvements in documentation were needed. The audit recommended increased use of methotrexate and improved clinical pathways to ensure guideline adherence.
Management of mild covid infection in pregnancy Niranjan Chavan
The document provides guidelines for managing mild COVID-19 infection in pregnancy. It discusses the clinical presentation of mild infection, recommendations for home isolation and monitoring, and guidance on antepartum, intrapartum, postpartum care and breastfeeding. Key points include managing asymptomatic cases through teleconsultation, monitoring for danger signs requiring admission, and making delivery decisions based on obstetric rather than COVID-19 status alone.
Septic shock, updated presentation, including latest guidelines from Intensive care societies and how to approach to the diagnosis with few notes about Early Goal Directed Therapy and role of steroids
The document discusses early treatment for sepsis patients. It summarizes that early and appropriate antimicrobial therapy is key to reducing mortality from sepsis. It then discusses definitions of sepsis that have evolved over time from 1991 to 2016. The Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score and quick SOFA (qSOFA) score are introduced to better predict mortality risk and identify organ dysfunction in sepsis patients compared to the previous systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) criteria. The SOFA score is shown to have superior predictive validity for in-hospital mortality compared to SIRS criteria or qSOFA score.
Drug interactions and overlapping toxicities between ART and other medications require expertise to determine the optimal treatment regimen. Involving an HIV specialist helps ensure the regimen is both effective against HIV and safe for the pregnant woman and developing fetus.
Jocelyn Keehner, MD
Infectious Disease Fellow
Division of Infectious Diseases & Global Public Health
Department of Medicine
University of California, San Diego
Sinus Bradicardia on grade II dengue hemorragic fever.pptxSyahrulAdzim
This case report describes a 37-year-old man diagnosed with Grade II dengue hemorrhagic fever who presented with sinus bradycardia. Laboratory tests confirmed dengue infection and showed thrombocytopenia and elevated liver enzymes. Chest X-ray found left pleural effusion. The patient was treated conservatively with IV fluids, antiemetics, and analgesics. Dengue virus can cause myocardial inflammation and arrhythmias like bradycardia through direct viral invasion or immune mediated mechanisms. This case emphasizes that bradycardia is a common finding in dengue that results from the cardiac effects of the viral infection.
Utility of routine surveillance blood cultures in asymptomatic allogeneic he...Ahmed Abdelhakeem
Utility of routine surveillance blood cultures in asymptomatic allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients with indwelling central venous catheters at a comprehensive cancer center
(1) Severe COVID-19 infection can cause a hyperinflammatory response and cytokine release syndrome similar to what is seen with CAR-T therapy. (2) Preliminary evidence from case studies in China and Michigan Medicine's experience show that treating severe COVID-19 patients with IL-6 blockade via drugs like tocilizumab and sarilizumab can improve clinical outcomes by reducing inflammation and oxygen requirements. (3) However, large randomized controlled trials are still needed to determine which patients may benefit most from IL-6 blockade and to fully understand its risks, optimal timing, and effects on viral clearance.
Edward Cachay, MD, MAS
Professor of Medicine
Division of Infectious Diseases & Global Public Health
Department of Medicine
University of California, San Diego
Assumed Maternal Morbidity August 2023 .pptxAwais83
This document presents statistics on maternal morbidity for the month of August 2023 from Dr. Anam Jamil and Dr. Sana Khan. It finds that of the 911 admissions, 256 (28.1%) had maternal morbidity. The most common causes were hypertensive disorders (65 cases, 25.4%), antepartum hemorrhage (40 cases, 15.6%), postpartum hemorrhage (24 cases, 9.3%), and severe anemia (68 cases, 26.56%). Several severe cases are described in detail, including one case of placenta percreta requiring hysterectomy and one case of scar dehiscence with sepsis requiring transfer to another hospital. The document concludes by emphas
This document discusses maternal sepsis. It begins with an introduction on maternal health and mortality rates. It then discusses why sepsis is an important cause of maternal mortality, accounting for up to 15% globally. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign is described as an initiative to reduce sepsis mortality through protocolized care bundles. The 6-hour and 24-hour bundles are summarized, focusing on early antibiotics, lactate measurement, fluid resuscitation, and glucose control. Empiric antibiotic selection and considering additional interventions like surgery are also mentioned.
Mealesss Global Regional MR Elimination OverviewLourduAnthoni1
This document provides an overview of measles, rubella, and measles-rubella (MR) vaccination strategies and progress in eliminating these diseases globally and within specific countries and regions. It summarizes key facts about measles and rubella, including symptoms, complications, mortality rates, burden of congenital rubella syndrome, and the effectiveness of the MR vaccine. It also presents data on reported measles and rubella cases and outbreaks in India at the national, state, and city levels to illustrate disease distribution and vaccination progress. The overall aim is to promote MR vaccination campaigns and strategies to achieve over 95% population immunity through two doses of the vaccine to eliminate measles, rubella, and congenital rubella syndrome.
This document outlines objectives and content for a presentation on implementing protocols for early recognition and management of maternal sepsis. The objectives include identifying differences between sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock; symptoms for early recognition and management; and the importance of implementing OB sepsis screening, protocols, training staff, and collecting data. Causes of maternal sepsis are discussed. Screening criteria are adjusted for perinatal patients compared to non-OB adults. Definitions of sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock, and bundles are provided. Delays in diagnosis and treatment are linked to increased mortality, so early recognition and treatment through bundles are important for improving outcomes in maternal sepsis.
1) Bacterial sepsis in neonates is a clinical syndrome of infection with bacteremia in the first month of life, which can lead to pneumonia or meningitis. It is a major cause of neonatal mortality.
2) Early onset sepsis occurs within 72 hours of birth and is usually caused by maternal genital tract bacteria. Late onset sepsis occurs after 72 hours and is often due to environmental bacteria or prolonged hospitalization.
3) Diagnosis is based on risk factors, clinical features and confirmation via sepsis screening tests, blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures. Treatment involves supportive care and antibiotics.
Puerperal sepsis was defined as infection of the genital tract occurring at any time between the onset of rupture of membranes or labour, and the 42nd day postpartum in which two or more of the following are present: Fever (oral temperature 38.5°C/101.3°F or higher on any occasion
Management of mild covid infection in pregnancy Niranjan Chavan
The document provides guidelines for managing mild COVID-19 infection in pregnancy. It discusses the clinical presentation of mild infection, recommendations for home isolation and monitoring, and guidance on antepartum, intrapartum, postpartum care and breastfeeding. Key points include managing asymptomatic cases through teleconsultation, monitoring for danger signs requiring admission, and making delivery decisions based on obstetric rather than COVID-19 status alone.
Septic shock, updated presentation, including latest guidelines from Intensive care societies and how to approach to the diagnosis with few notes about Early Goal Directed Therapy and role of steroids
The document discusses early treatment for sepsis patients. It summarizes that early and appropriate antimicrobial therapy is key to reducing mortality from sepsis. It then discusses definitions of sepsis that have evolved over time from 1991 to 2016. The Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score and quick SOFA (qSOFA) score are introduced to better predict mortality risk and identify organ dysfunction in sepsis patients compared to the previous systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) criteria. The SOFA score is shown to have superior predictive validity for in-hospital mortality compared to SIRS criteria or qSOFA score.
Drug interactions and overlapping toxicities between ART and other medications require expertise to determine the optimal treatment regimen. Involving an HIV specialist helps ensure the regimen is both effective against HIV and safe for the pregnant woman and developing fetus.
Jocelyn Keehner, MD
Infectious Disease Fellow
Division of Infectious Diseases & Global Public Health
Department of Medicine
University of California, San Diego
Sinus Bradicardia on grade II dengue hemorragic fever.pptxSyahrulAdzim
This case report describes a 37-year-old man diagnosed with Grade II dengue hemorrhagic fever who presented with sinus bradycardia. Laboratory tests confirmed dengue infection and showed thrombocytopenia and elevated liver enzymes. Chest X-ray found left pleural effusion. The patient was treated conservatively with IV fluids, antiemetics, and analgesics. Dengue virus can cause myocardial inflammation and arrhythmias like bradycardia through direct viral invasion or immune mediated mechanisms. This case emphasizes that bradycardia is a common finding in dengue that results from the cardiac effects of the viral infection.
Utility of routine surveillance blood cultures in asymptomatic allogeneic he...Ahmed Abdelhakeem
Utility of routine surveillance blood cultures in asymptomatic allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients with indwelling central venous catheters at a comprehensive cancer center
(1) Severe COVID-19 infection can cause a hyperinflammatory response and cytokine release syndrome similar to what is seen with CAR-T therapy. (2) Preliminary evidence from case studies in China and Michigan Medicine's experience show that treating severe COVID-19 patients with IL-6 blockade via drugs like tocilizumab and sarilizumab can improve clinical outcomes by reducing inflammation and oxygen requirements. (3) However, large randomized controlled trials are still needed to determine which patients may benefit most from IL-6 blockade and to fully understand its risks, optimal timing, and effects on viral clearance.
Edward Cachay, MD, MAS
Professor of Medicine
Division of Infectious Diseases & Global Public Health
Department of Medicine
University of California, San Diego
Assumed Maternal Morbidity August 2023 .pptxAwais83
This document presents statistics on maternal morbidity for the month of August 2023 from Dr. Anam Jamil and Dr. Sana Khan. It finds that of the 911 admissions, 256 (28.1%) had maternal morbidity. The most common causes were hypertensive disorders (65 cases, 25.4%), antepartum hemorrhage (40 cases, 15.6%), postpartum hemorrhage (24 cases, 9.3%), and severe anemia (68 cases, 26.56%). Several severe cases are described in detail, including one case of placenta percreta requiring hysterectomy and one case of scar dehiscence with sepsis requiring transfer to another hospital. The document concludes by emphas
This document discusses maternal sepsis. It begins with an introduction on maternal health and mortality rates. It then discusses why sepsis is an important cause of maternal mortality, accounting for up to 15% globally. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign is described as an initiative to reduce sepsis mortality through protocolized care bundles. The 6-hour and 24-hour bundles are summarized, focusing on early antibiotics, lactate measurement, fluid resuscitation, and glucose control. Empiric antibiotic selection and considering additional interventions like surgery are also mentioned.
Mealesss Global Regional MR Elimination OverviewLourduAnthoni1
This document provides an overview of measles, rubella, and measles-rubella (MR) vaccination strategies and progress in eliminating these diseases globally and within specific countries and regions. It summarizes key facts about measles and rubella, including symptoms, complications, mortality rates, burden of congenital rubella syndrome, and the effectiveness of the MR vaccine. It also presents data on reported measles and rubella cases and outbreaks in India at the national, state, and city levels to illustrate disease distribution and vaccination progress. The overall aim is to promote MR vaccination campaigns and strategies to achieve over 95% population immunity through two doses of the vaccine to eliminate measles, rubella, and congenital rubella syndrome.
This document outlines objectives and content for a presentation on implementing protocols for early recognition and management of maternal sepsis. The objectives include identifying differences between sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock; symptoms for early recognition and management; and the importance of implementing OB sepsis screening, protocols, training staff, and collecting data. Causes of maternal sepsis are discussed. Screening criteria are adjusted for perinatal patients compared to non-OB adults. Definitions of sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock, and bundles are provided. Delays in diagnosis and treatment are linked to increased mortality, so early recognition and treatment through bundles are important for improving outcomes in maternal sepsis.
1) Bacterial sepsis in neonates is a clinical syndrome of infection with bacteremia in the first month of life, which can lead to pneumonia or meningitis. It is a major cause of neonatal mortality.
2) Early onset sepsis occurs within 72 hours of birth and is usually caused by maternal genital tract bacteria. Late onset sepsis occurs after 72 hours and is often due to environmental bacteria or prolonged hospitalization.
3) Diagnosis is based on risk factors, clinical features and confirmation via sepsis screening tests, blood and cerebrospinal fluid cultures. Treatment involves supportive care and antibiotics.
Puerperal sepsis was defined as infection of the genital tract occurring at any time between the onset of rupture of membranes or labour, and the 42nd day postpartum in which two or more of the following are present: Fever (oral temperature 38.5°C/101.3°F or higher on any occasion
Codeless Generative AI Pipelines
(GenAI with Milvus)
https://ml.dssconf.pl/user.html#!/lecture/DSSML24-041a/rate
Discover the potential of real-time streaming in the context of GenAI as we delve into the intricacies of Apache NiFi and its capabilities. Learn how this tool can significantly simplify the data engineering workflow for GenAI applications, allowing you to focus on the creative aspects rather than the technical complexities. I will guide you through practical examples and use cases, showing the impact of automation on prompt building. From data ingestion to transformation and delivery, witness how Apache NiFi streamlines the entire pipeline, ensuring a smooth and hassle-free experience.
Timothy Spann
https://www.youtube.com/@FLaNK-Stack
https://medium.com/@tspann
https://www.datainmotion.dev/
milvus, unstructured data, vector database, zilliz, cloud, vectors, python, deep learning, generative ai, genai, nifi, kafka, flink, streaming, iot, edge
4th Modern Marketing Reckoner by MMA Global India & Group M: 60+ experts on W...Social Samosa
The Modern Marketing Reckoner (MMR) is a comprehensive resource packed with POVs from 60+ industry leaders on how AI is transforming the 4 key pillars of marketing – product, place, price and promotions.
The Ipsos - AI - Monitor 2024 Report.pdfSocial Samosa
According to Ipsos AI Monitor's 2024 report, 65% Indians said that products and services using AI have profoundly changed their daily life in the past 3-5 years.
Open Source Contributions to Postgres: The Basics POSETTE 2024ElizabethGarrettChri
Postgres is the most advanced open-source database in the world and it's supported by a community, not a single company. So how does this work? How does code actually get into Postgres? I recently had a patch submitted and committed and I want to share what I learned in that process. I’ll give you an overview of Postgres versions and how the underlying project codebase functions. I’ll also show you the process for submitting a patch and getting that tested and committed.
ViewShift: Hassle-free Dynamic Policy Enforcement for Every Data LakeWalaa Eldin Moustafa
Dynamic policy enforcement is becoming an increasingly important topic in today’s world where data privacy and compliance is a top priority for companies, individuals, and regulators alike. In these slides, we discuss how LinkedIn implements a powerful dynamic policy enforcement engine, called ViewShift, and integrates it within its data lake. We show the query engine architecture and how catalog implementations can automatically route table resolutions to compliance-enforcing SQL views. Such views have a set of very interesting properties: (1) They are auto-generated from declarative data annotations. (2) They respect user-level consent and preferences (3) They are context-aware, encoding a different set of transformations for different use cases (4) They are portable; while the SQL logic is only implemented in one SQL dialect, it is accessible in all engines.
#SQL #Views #Privacy #Compliance #DataLake
Predictably Improve Your B2B Tech Company's Performance by Leveraging DataKiwi Creative
Harness the power of AI-backed reports, benchmarking and data analysis to predict trends and detect anomalies in your marketing efforts.
Peter Caputa, CEO at Databox, reveals how you can discover the strategies and tools to increase your growth rate (and margins!).
From metrics to track to data habits to pick up, enhance your reporting for powerful insights to improve your B2B tech company's marketing.
- - -
This is the webinar recording from the June 2024 HubSpot User Group (HUG) for B2B Technology USA.
Watch the video recording at https://youtu.be/5vjwGfPN9lw
Sign up for future HUG events at https://events.hubspot.com/b2b-technology-usa/
2. STATISTICS FOR TOTAL ADMISSIONS
Total admissions: 218
Total discharge: 130
Total expiries: 66
Referred : 0
LAMA: 9
Under treatment: 13
PERCENT MORTALITY : 30.2%
DISCHARGE : 59%
3. EXPIRIES STATS 83 (32.17%)
EXPIRIES WITHIN 24
HRS OF ADMISSION
32 48.4 % of total expiries
14.6% of total
admissions
EXPIRIES FROM 1 TO 7
DAYS OF ADMISSION
22 33 % of total expiries
10 % of total admissions
EXPIRIES AFTER 7 DAYS
OF ADMISSION
12 18.1 % of total expiries
5. I% of total admissions
5. EXPIRIES STATS AS PER ADMISSIONS
OPD/ER CASES: 34 EXPIRIES (138 TOTAL ADMISSIONS)
24.6% OF TOTAL OPD ADMISSIOS
51.5 % OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
15.5 % OF TOTAL ADMISSIONS
INSIDE ATH REFERRALS: 18 EXPIRIES ( 50 TOTAL ADMISSIONS)
36 % OF ATH ADMISSIONS
27.2% OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
&.2 % OF TOTAL ADMISSIONS
REFFERED CASES: 14 EXPIRIES ( 30 TOTAL ADMISSIONS)
46.6 % OF TOTAL REFFERED ADMISSIONS
21.2 % OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
6.4 % OF TOTAL ADMISSION
8. HIE
Total: 68
discharge: 38
LAMA:1
Expire:29
PERCENT MORTALITY: 43.9% out of total expiries
13.3 % of total admissions
18 WITHIN 24 HOURS OF ADMISSION( 73.6 %)
10. Neonatal jaundice
Total admissions: 33
Total discharges: 28
Total expiries: 1
patient presented with kernicterus signs
Lama: 1
Percentage: 1.5 % of total expiries and 3 % of total admissions
Exchange transfusions : 4
DOUBLE EXCHANGE: 0
0 cases of G6PD deficiency detected
5 cases of RH incomp.
6 cases of ABO
1 case of breast milk jaundice.
11. NEONATAL SEPSIS
TOTAL : 35
EXPIRED : 6
LAMA: 2
DISCHARGED: 20
EXPIRED WITH 24 HOURS : 2
PERCENT MORTALITY : 9% of total expiries
2.7 % of total admissions
12. EARLY ONSET NEONATAL SEPSIS
TOTAL 22
DISCHARGE 17
EXPIRE 1
LAMA 1
REFERRED 0
PERCENT MORTALITY 1.5% of total expiries
0.4 % of total admissions
13. LATE ONSET NEONATAL SEPSIS
TOTAL 13
EXPIRE 05
DISCHARGE 4
LAMA 0
REFERRED 0
PERCENT
MORTALITY
7.5% 0f total expiries
2.2% of total admission
15. TOTAL ADMISSIONS: 50
TOTAL EXPIRIES: 25
12 WITHIN 24 HOUR
TOTAL DISCHARGES: 20
LAMA: 1
MORTALITY:
50% OF TOTAL PRETERM ADMISSIONS
37.8% OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
11.4% OF TOTAL ADMISSIONS
16. • IN HOSPITAL PRETERMS: 40
EXPIRED: 20
50 % OF IN HOSPITAL PRETERMS
30.3 % OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
• OPD AND REFFERED PRETERMS : 10
EXPIRIED : 5
LAMA: 0
50% OF OPD/REFFERED PRETERM EXPIRED
7.5% OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
17. Preterm mortality
LESS THAN 28 WEEKS POG
7 out of 8 expired
28+1 to 31+6 WEEKS POG
10 out of 16 expired
32 to 33+6 WEEKS POG
07 out of 20 expired
> 34 WEEKS POG
1 out of 6 expired
Gestation age
based mortality
18. IUGR
TOTAL PATIENTS: 04
EXPIRED: 01
DISCHARGED: 2
Lama:1
MORTALITY:
25% OF IUGR babies
1.5 % OF TOTAL EXPIRIES
0.4% OF TOTAL ADMISSION
19. Infant mortality rate Pakistan 2022
56/1000
Neonatal mortality rate of Pakistan in 2022 is
42/1000
GLOBAL NMR 17
PAKISTAN
NEONATE
S STATS: