Abstract
Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is a high-impact practice for reducing infant mortality. It
was recently implemented in our paediatric department at Treichville Teaching Hospital.
The aim of this study is to analyse mother-kangaroo care activity at Treichville Teaching
Hospital after five years of practice.
Patients and method: Cross-sectional, analytical study of data on low birthweight babies
who stayed in the ‘mother-kangaroo’ subunit of the paediatrics department at the Teaching
Hospital of Treicville from 1 March 2019 to 28 February 2024 (i.e. 5 years). The data were
analysed using SPSS software version 25, and the chi-square test was used for proportions
at the 95% significance level.
Results: 55.1% of low birthweight babies (LBW), i.e. 737 LBW admitted to the paediatric
ward, were able to benefit from Kangaroo Mother Care. The average age of the mothers
of these LBWs was 28.9 years and most were unemployed (42.9%). These newborns were
born in a teaching hospital in 34.7% of cases. The transfer of these newborns to Treichville
Teaching Hospital was medicalised in 23.3% of cases. They were very premature (GA
between 28 and 32 weeks of amenorrhoea) in 59.1% of cases, with an average birth weight
of 1535g and a low birth weight of 815g. Only 4.9% of these babies were exclusively
breastfed. The average length of stay was 14 days and the average daily weight gain was 29
±82g. We noted that maternal age (p<0.001), mother’s level of education (p<0.001), type
of pregnancy (p<0.001) and the weight of the newborn on admission to the KMC (P=0.01)
could influence the mean daily weight gain.
Conclusion: The kangaroo method is still effective in our practice, with a success rate
of over 99%. However, there are a number of difficulties to be noted, in particular quasinon-exclusive breastfeeding, inadequate nutrition and the fact that mothers are more or
less unavailable. Multidisciplinary follow-up would therefore be invaluable, and all these
factors constitute the challenges to be met.
Keywords
Kangaroo Mother Care, assessment, low birth weight, effectiveness, challenges, Côte d’Ivoire