13 research outputs found

    Convective burn from use of hairdryer for heel warming prior to the heel prick test - a case report

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    Background Blood sampling through heel lancing is the most common invasive painful procedure performed on newborn infants. Case Presentation We report the case of a five day old infant who sustained burns to the left foot and leg after the mother's hairdryer was used by the midwife to warm the baby's heel prior to capillary blood sampling (CBS) with an automated device. Conclusion Heel warming is not recommended for routine CBS although it is often practiced. If pre-warming is to be practiced, standardised devices should be used rather than improvised techniques. This will reduce the risk of injury to these infants

    Situación actual del cribado neonatal de enfermedades metabólicas en España y en el mundo

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    Newborn screening programs are key players in a country?s public health strategies, preventing the burden of care associated with the screened disorders. Its importance has dramatically intensified in recent years due to the increasing number of disorders that fulfil criteria for screening. Since the 1960s, many countries implemented newborn screening programs that are now, at least in developed countries, universal, well established, and with excellent results. Nevertheless, much work is still to be done, mainly in developing countries of Africa, Asia, and South America. In some European countries, including Spain, uniformity of screening panels between different regions is still a challenge, being a source of health inequalities between citizens. The authors will present the current status of newborn screening programs in Spain and integrate it into the current European and world scenario.Los programas de cribado neonatal (PCN) son clave en las estrategias de salud pública de una región determinada, establecidas para prevenir los daños asociados a las patologías cribadas. Su importancia se ha intensificado sustancialmente en los últimos años debido al creciente número de trastornos en los que diferentes organismos de evaluación han demostrado el beneficio de su detección temprana para el recién nacido. Desde los años 60-70 del siglo pasado, muchas regiones implementaron de PNC que hoy en día, al menos en los países desarrollados, son universales, bien establecidos y con excelentes resultados. Sin embargo, aún queda mucho por hacer, principalmente en países en vías de desarrollo de África, Asia y América del Sur. En algunos países europeos, incluida España, una mayor uniformidad entre los paneles de cribado de las diferentes regiones continúa siendo un reto, pues conduce a desigualdades en materia de salud. Los autores presentan el estado actual de los PCN en España y lo contextualizan en el escenario real europeo y mundial

    Emphasizing parental choice on newborn screening

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    This study assessed the implications of changing the protocol for newborn screening for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) to make choice more explicit. In the intervention group, if screening was requested, a separate card was used. Mothers from both intervention and control groups completed a questionnaire providing data on satisfaction, awareness the test was optional, choice and worry. Overall the intervention did improve satisfaction and awareness that the test was optional with no increase in levels of worry. However, some mothers felt they had been given a choice about screening, but were not aware that the test was optional. There is evidence that even with a rigorous service delivery protocol situations do arise where a decision to screen may not be ‘consented’. This raises important questions about the feasibility of obtaining consent for other newborn screening tests and subsequent storage of DNA
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