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  1. 6 lip 2021 · This is due to several factors that place babies in LMIC at greater risk for hyperbilirubinemia, including increased prevalence of hematologic disorders leading to hemolysis, increased sepsis, less prenatal or postnatal care, and a lack of resources to treat jaundiced babies.

  2. Key results. Sunlight versus no treatment: babies exposed to sunlight may have a reduced occurrence of jaundice and be jaundiced for fewer days compared to babies who have no preventive treatment for jaundice. There was no reduction in readmission to hospital for jaundice in babies exposed to sunlight compared to babies who were not treated.

  3. 6 sty 2022 · When your baby is discharged from the hospital, your doctor or nurse will look for jaundice. If your baby has jaundice, your doctor will assess the likelihood of severe jaundice based on a number of factors: How much bilirubin is in the blood. Whether your baby was born prematurely.

  4. Podcast: Sunlight for the prevention and treatment of hyperbilirubinemia in newborns. Some new-born babies will suffer from jaundice and there are several Cochrane reviews of possible ways to prevent or treat it. These were added to in July 2021 with a new review of the effects of sunlight.

  5. 16 sie 2019 · In this historical review, we chronicled the basic to the neurotoxic components of severe neonatal hyperbilirubinemia and the use of standardized interventions.

  6. Hyperbilirubinemia affects approximately 60% of full-term and 80% of preterm neonates.1 Approximately 10% of newborns are likely to develop clinically significant hyperbilirubinemia requiring close monitoring and treatment.2 In the early period (0–6 days), neonatal hyperbilirubinemia accounted for 1309.3 deaths per 100 000 livebirths and was ...

  7. 28 sie 2018 · In The Lancet Global Health, Tina M Slusher and colleagues1 show, in a rigorous study with clear results, that filtered-sunlight phototherapy (FSPT) can be as efficacious and safe as conventional intensive electric phototherapy (IEPT) for treatment of moderate-to-severe neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia in a simulated rural Nigerian setting.