Kangaroo mother care to reduce morbidity and mortality and improve growth in low-birth-weight infants
Every year, more than 20 million infants are born weighing less than 2500 g – over 96% of them in developing countries. These low-birth-weight infants are at increased risk of neonatal morbidity and mortality.
Conventional neonatal care of low-birth-weight infants is expensive and needs both highly skilled personnel and permanent logistic support. Evidence suggests that kangaroo mother care is a safe and effective alternative to conventional neonatal care, especially in under-resourced settings and can reduce morbidity and mortality in low-birth-weight infants as well as improve growth and breastfeeding. Kangaroo mother care involves:
- early, continuous and prolonged skin-to-skin contact between a mother and her newborn
- frequent and exclusive breastfeeding
- early discharge from hospital.
WHO documents
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Kangaroo mother care: a practical guide
Status: published
Publication year: 2003 -
Hospital care for children: guidelines for the management of common illnesses with limited resources
Status: published
Publication year: 2005 -
Guidelines on optimal feeding of low birth-weight infants in low- and middle-income countries
Status: published
Publication year: 2011
Evidence
Cochrane review
- Kangaroo mother care to reduce morbidity and mortality in low birthweight infants
- Early skin-to-skin contact for mothers and their healthy newborn infants
Other systematic reviews
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'Kangaroo mother care' to prevent neonatal deaths due to preterm birth complications
Lawn JE et al.
International Journal of Epidemiology, 2010, 39(Suppl. 1):i144–i154. -
Maternal satisfaction and clinical effect of kangaroo mother care in preterm infants: a meta‐analysis
Yu Z-B et al.
Chinese Journal of Evidence‐Based Medicine, 2008, 8(4):277–283.