The Herald (South Africa)

Neonatal unit gets ready to admit mothers with Covid-19

- Tanya Farber

Charlotte Maxeke Johannesbu­rg Academic Hospital is preparing to admit pregnant women with Covid-19, blazing the trail for neonatal units.

The hospital has prepared disposable boxes for resuscitat­ion equipment, a new messaging system between obstetric and neonatal staff, and an isolation area for newborns of mothers who might be sick.

Dr Robin Saggers and other experts from Johannesbu­rg’s Wits University have ticked all the boxes of internatio­nal guidelines and written up their preparatio­ns in the Wits Journal of Clinical Medicine, so that other hospitals can take heed.

“The neonatal unit at [Charlotte Maxeke] stands ready to attend to the first newborns of suspected or confirmed mothers of the growing Covid-19 pandemic,” Saggers and his team said.

“While staff anxiety levels are high, clear protocols and communicat­ion of the protocols are vital in allaying fears.”

Anxiety could be brought down by neonatal units adopting a rational approach to suspected cases and education for health-care workers.

Fears had centred on the availabili­ty of PPE, Covid-19 transmissi­on to staff and how to nurse potential cases.

“Since our usual patient load will not decrease, we must be as prepared, adaptable and efficient as possible,” Saggers said, adding that normal delivery room protocol had been turned upside-down.

“There used to be a bottomup approach, where an intern would attend first and call for a registrar or consultant’s help if required,” but now the opposite approach would be taken.

“To minimise transmissi­on risk, only essential staff would be in the delivery room or theatre.”

The sealed cardboard resuscitat­ion boxes replace trolleys, and contain PPE and a full array of equipment.

The hospital has also repurposed a triage area as an isolation area for newborns of suspected or confirmed Covid-19 mothers, and created an online resource portal for neonatal consultant­s and fellows.

Under health department guidelines, healthy newborns will not be tested for Covid-19, “irrespecti­ve of maternal Covid-19 result”.

Sickly babies will be tested immediatel­y and considered infectious for at least 14 days after symptom resolution.

Social workers and psychologi­sts are on standby.

“In a neonatal intensive care unit or neonatal unit, a virus outbreak will bring psychologi­cal stress to the patient’s parents and other family members,” Saggers said.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC), “it is not yet known if pregnant women have a greater chance of getting sick from Covid-19 than the general public, nor whether they are more likely to have serious illness as a result”.

However, “pregnant women have changes in their bodies that may increase their risk of some infections”.

The CDC said mother-tochild transmissi­on was unlikely but “after birth a newborn is susceptibl­e to person-to-person spread”.

A small number of babies have tested positive for the virus shortly after birth, but it is not known if they contracted the infection before or after birth.

A brief from Stellenbos­ch University said Covid-19-positive mothers should breastfeed their newborns, as recommende­d by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), but that appropriat­e infection control measures to limit respirator­y droplets from the mother should be observed.

The CDC advises: “If you are sick and choose to breastfeed, wear a face mask and wash your hands before each feeding.”

Breast milk was not believed to transmit the virus.

“The virus has not been detected in amniotic fluid, breastmilk or other maternal samples,” the CDC said.

Julie Mentor, leader of the Embrace movement that provides support for early motherhood, encouraged pregnant women and mothers to seek informatio­n from a reliable, one-stop platform.

Embrace and other NGOs have created Messages for Mothers, which provides expert input on physical and mental health for expectant mothers.

“This pandemic is causing real anxiety for pregnant women and mothers,” Mentor said.

“Women are unsure who to trust, so we thought we could play a vital role.”

 ?? Picture: ALON SKUY ?? TRAIL BLAZER: A baby in an incubator at Charlotte Maxeke Johannesbu­rg Academic Hospital
Picture: ALON SKUY TRAIL BLAZER: A baby in an incubator at Charlotte Maxeke Johannesbu­rg Academic Hospital

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