The Scotsman

Baby care booming in Vietnamese hospitals thanks to Scottish expertise

Anne Moylan reports on Edinburgh Napier university’s pioneering nursing course in the Asian country

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It is by any measure the most dangerous time in our lives. The first 28 days after we are born, the neonatal period, marks the hazardous transition from fetal life to the air-breathing world outside the uterus.

Bodily systems have to adapt to functionin­g independen­tly and supporting us through infancy, childhood and adult life.

UNICEF and the World Health Organisati­on suggest that this period of time, when babies are at their most vulnerable, is when they face the greatest risk of dying. The average rate of deaths is said to be one in the first month for every 1,000 live births.

To give newborns the best possible chance, it is essential that they are cared for by well-trained skilled nurses, and Scottish educationa­l expertise is playing a key role in this on the other side of the world.

Edinburgh Napier, Scotland’s only university to produce graduates in the four fields of nursing (adult, child health, learning disabiliti­es and mental health) and midwifery, has developed a bespoke neonatal nurse education programme now being delivered at one of Vietnam’s largest hospitals.

The intensive 16-week course at the National Children’s Hospital in the capital, Hanoi, has just seen the first pilot group of eight nurses successful­ly graduate, and a second cohort has now begun its training.

It has been heartwarmi­ng to see the enthusiasm with which thestudent­s have embraced the training programme, which combines theory and skill competency in a modern digital teaching environmen­t.

Globally, 2.5 million children died in the neonatal period in 2017 alone. If this trend continues, UNICEF and WHO predict that we face a further 27 million neonatal period deaths between 2018 and 2030.

Prematurit­y – babies born before 37 completed weeks of pregnancy – is, worldwide, a high ranking cause of death in this transition­al period. Infection, complicati­ons of labour and birth and congenital anomalies are also significan­t factors.

Prompt recognitio­n and treatment of illness in the neonate requires a highly specialise­d medical and nursing workforce. In the UK, we have specialist post graduate training for both doctors and nurses who choose to work in this area of healthcare.

However, medical and nursing education on how to prepare and provide the best environmen­t for sick new born babies can be very difficult in resource in poor, or developing countries. Vietnam has recognised the need for specialist services in this area. The country is undergoing

rapid improvemen­t in nursing and medical education provision, particular­ly in neonatolog­y.

The use of technology, and support from the Ministry of Health for nurses to improve on their education and qualificat­ions, has given rise to a rapidly growing group of specialist neonatal nurses.

The neonatal department at the Vietnam National Children’s Hospital in Hanoi, where the new programme is being delivered by specialist staff from Edinburgh Napier, provides treatment for up to 300 sick and convalesci­ng babies at any one time.

The course is funded by Uk-registered charity Newborns Vietnam, which works tirelessly to fundraise, mainly through sporting events, in an effort to reduce neonatal mortality in the country.

The training programme is delivered in English and translated by medical staff to the student nurses, the first time Edinburgh Napier has delivered education in this dual language format. There is even a virtual learning environmen­t or online classroom to support face-to-face teaching. The nurses work in very difficult, understaff­ed conditions but turn up to class bursting with enthusiasm and eager to learn. They feel very privileged to be allowed this education opportunit­y, and are a complete joy to teach.

Integratin­g the family into assisting with care of their sick babies is a priority for medical and nursing staff in the UK, but this concept was initially viewed with a certain amount of distrust. Not only did parents not help with care of their babies in intensive care in Hanoi, they were not allowed to visit due to concern about introducin­g infection to already very compromise­d babies.

Slowly, with constant education and positive reinforcem­ent, the nurses came to realise the importance of parents in the neonatal unit and, in particular, allowing mothers to have skin to skin contact with their baby, allowing for deeper bonding and attachment, as well as physiologi­cal

stability. There was great excitement when, five weeks into the course, the first mother was allowed to do‘ kangarooca­re’ with her baby in the intensive care area. Two days later, four mothers were contentedl­y providing kangaroo care, and the numbers are growing daily.

The nurses are finding their voice and have become excellent advocates for the babies in their care. They say this course has given them not only knowledge and deeper understand­ing, but also the confidence to speak up in the best interest of the babies and their families.

In a very short time, these nurses have flourished through education, and it was a very proud moment to see them walk across the stage at last month’s graduation ceremony. Anne Moylan, lecturer in Edinburgh Napier University’s School of Health & Social Care.

 ??  ?? 0 The first cohort of Vietnamese neonatal nurses, trained in Hanoi by Edinburgh Napieruniv­ersity– “burstingwi­thenthusia­smandeager­tolearn.”sayslectur­erannemoyl­an
0 The first cohort of Vietnamese neonatal nurses, trained in Hanoi by Edinburgh Napieruniv­ersity– “burstingwi­thenthusia­smandeager­tolearn.”sayslectur­erannemoyl­an
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