By Hema Magge
Senior Program Officer, Maternal, Newborn, & Child Health, Gates Foundation
Mar 30, 2022
min read
Over the past 20 years, child mortality has declined dramatically but death among newborn infants has not. Each year, about 1.6 million babies who are born prematurely or have low birth weight die in their first month. That’s why it’s so important to figure out what works to improve neonatal outcomes. In multiple studies, a low-tech intervention has been shown to improve health outcomes for newborns as well as their mothers. It’s called kangaroo mother care (KMC), named for the way the baby is placed on a mother’s chest for hours after birth. The protocol, involving prolonged skin-to-skin contact and prioritizing breastfeeding, was developed and refined in Bogota, Colombia, by doctors Edgar Rey, Héctor Martínez, and Luis Navarrete in the 1970s and 1980s. Their early research and clinical experience showed a significant reduction in mortality. Since then, this powerful intervention, developed in a low-resource setting, has saved countless babies’ lives around the world. Ongoing research continues to bear out the Colombian doctors’ original work.
According to a 2021 estimate, KMC immediately after birth could save 150,000 more lives each year globally compared with the current recommendation of starting it only once a baby is stable. A 2021 modeling study by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine found that the benefit of universal KMC for small or sick newborns was 65-fold greater than the neonatal mortality risk from COVID-19 at five hospitals in New York and one hospital in Mumbai, India, when factoring in rates of COVID-19 infection and mother-to-baby transmission in those settings. And yet, a 2020 survey of nurses in 62 mostly low- and middle-income countries found that two-thirds were choosing to separate mother and baby when the mother tested positive or when her COVID-19 status was unknown. Twenty percent said they would separate a baby from a mother even if the mother tested negative.
Hema Magge, a senior program officer at the Gates Foundation and a pediatrician/researcher, wants to see more widespread use of KMC, regardless of the pandemic. She calls KMC an “utterly human and humane intervention, but with all of the scientific data behind it. That’s what makes it so powerful.” She also understands its challenges. Here she shares her views on the subject.
One of my favorite photos is from the years I spent working with the Rwanda Ministry of Health to establish some of the country’s first rural neonatal intensive care units, or NICUs. The photo shows a midwife I knew named Claudine, along with a mother and her tiny baby laying across her chest—skin to skin, the two of them wrapped together in a blanket. The baby, born early, has a feeding tube to receive her mother’s milk despite being unable to breastfeed. The midwife embraces the mother warmly. Though the mother has just gone through a difficult birth, she gazes at the camera with a look of joy. This is what the first days of getting to know your child should feel like—full of love, support, and solidarity.
Skin contact can reduce the infant mortality rate
This is a wonderful example of the power of kangaroo mother care (KMC), which supports a natural and powerful human process that keeps the baby warm, improves child bonding, and provides physiological stability. It’s adaptable and can be used alongside oxygen therapy, intravenous fluids, and even more intensive respiratory support. KMC has been shown repeatedly to be extremely effective in reducing mortality in preterm infants and low-birthweight infants—more effective, even, than some high-tech interventions such as incubator care.
Lessons from the kangaroo mother care ward
I will confess that when I first encountered KMC more than a decade ago, I was a bit skeptical. The issue wasn’t KMC itself. I believed that keeping babies close to their mothers after birth, with skin-to-skin contact and exclusive breastfeeding, was protective on many levels. But there was a sense back then that the global development community was promoting KMC as a cheap fix in places where “modern” neonatal medical care wasn’t available. To me, it felt like a way to avoid confronting the injustice of under-resourced health systems in poor countries.
In well-equipped hospitals, small or sick babies were whisked from their parents, supported with the latest technology, and put in incubator care. At the time, I felt we should be talking more about how to ensure universal access to high-tech neonatal care units like those where I trained in the United States.
I was also disheartened by what I saw in many KMC wards. Often, I’d see babies wrapped in blankets, not on a caregiver’s chest. Why weren’t the nurses putting the babies in the kangaroo position? And when mother and baby were wrapped KMC style, I sometimes got the sense that the mothers weren’t comfortable, that they felt trapped. I knew they wanted the best for their babies; so why weren’t they embracing this lifesaving practice, instead of conventional care?
I started to dig deeper, listen, and learn. I spoke with the mothers, and they taught me so much. Some felt scared to hold their tiny baby or were concerned that the baby would be cold without clothes. Others weren’t sure the baby would be safe, wrapped onto them, especially if the baby was hooked up to oxygen or IV tubes.
How could she provide continuous skin contact after birth when her own body needed to recover? How could she go to the bathroom? Or prepare her own meals (since hospitals didn’t provide them)? Or get rest when hospital policies didn’t allow even her husband to visit? When I visited mothers at home after discharge, I understood how hard it must have been to stay in the hospital with a preterm infant for days or weeks when she had other children at home who needed her.
I listened to the nurses, too, and began to understand the time and energy required to care for 15 babies as the sole nurse while also addressing the mothers’ concerns, fears, and needs. I began to see how caring for a baby in an incubator—where it’s easy to monitor vital signs, change IVs, and conduct labs—could feel more straightforward in some situations.
Suddenly what was billed as a “simple solution” became much more complex.
For me, it was a lesson. Properly using KMC would require a culture change and education about the benefits of kangaroo care. Health systems would have to be redesigned to preserve the bond between mother and baby and keep them together even when the baby needs additional medical support. Infrastructure and policies would need to change. And most of all, mothers would need to be treated with dignity.
Why more hospitals should choose kangaroo mother care
Many trials have demonstrated the clinical, nutritional, and developmental benefits of KMC, but there still has been a reluctance to use it, especially with the smallest and sickest infants who might have a severe infection or high risk of death. The Gates Foundation funded a trial to see if this benefit could be extended safely to infants weighing just 1 to 1.8 kilograms (around 2 to 4 pounds) who were thought to first require incubator stabilization. As it turned out, the trial had to be stopped early because immediate KMC was saving so many more lives than the conventional care.
My experience in Rwanda, coupled with the volumes of research, made me think more deeply about how health systems in wealthy countries have evolved over the years toward a model of separating small and sick infants from their mothers. In a typical NICU with limited space, there isn’t even a place for a parent to sit or lie with a baby on their chest to provide contact from birth. A mother’s life-sustaining warmth, heartbeat, and gentle breathing are replaced with machines. This is happening more frequently in poor countries, too. But it’s clear to me now that in applying this scientific lens—or what we thought was scientific—we are disrupting the natural human experience. We’re also not providing the best possible care to preterm infants. Now both rich and poor countries have the challenge of undoing this harm.
Kangaroom care can prioritize the mother and baby
Certainly, COVID-19 has seriously disrupted maternal, newborn, and child health care, with both maternal mortality and stillbirths rising sharply in some settings. But this disruption has also presented opportunities, not only by exposing the fragile nature of maternal and child health—and health care systems more broadly—but by doing something to stop preventable deaths. KMC is an entry point into reimagining how to provide person-centered, comprehensive care for small and sick newborn babies and their mothers. The foundation is now working with WHO, UNICEF, and other global partners to support the integration of KMC.
I’m optimistic that more doctors and nurses will recognize the transformational power of KMC. I saw it happen in Rwanda. Step by step, the hospital team started to address the issues the mothers and nurses identified. They began rethinking the physical design of neonatal care units and care delivery processes and recognizing the caregivers’ expertise. Bolstered by the power of community and shared experience, they began realizing the vision of KMC. I also see it happening in some of the best-resourced medical centers in high-income countries, including NICUs here in Seattle that are incorporating KMC into their care of premature babies, learning from experiences in Africa, Asia, and South America.
That vision is what I see in the photo. My friend Claudine was a clinical provider, ally, and advocate for keeping the baby and mother together. The mother felt respected and had her needs prioritized while nurturing her baby’s health. When the right tools are in place, you can walk into a KMC unit and see mothers and health care workers smiling. We just have to listen to the experts—mothers and caregivers—to do it right.
More in: COVID-19 Womens Health
Published: Mar 30, 2022
Author
Hema Magge
Senior Program Officer, Maternal, Newborn, & Child Health, Gates Foundation
Hema Magge is a pediatrician who leads the Maternal, Newborn, & Child Health team’s efforts to improve neonatal survival and developmental potential.
More in: COVID-19 Womens Health
Published: Mar 30, 2022
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