Original Research: Maternal and Neonatal Health

Optimising neonatal bubble continuous positive airway pressure: A Somaliland quality initiative

Hawa D. Mahmoud, Sarah C. Kent, Fatima E. Ibrahim, Najma Mohamed, Fatima A. Abdulahi, Meagan N. O'Neal, Priya Kanajam, Ellen K. Diego
African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine | Vol 17, No 1 | a4742 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/phcfm.v17i1.4742 | © 2025 Hawa D. Mahmoud, Sarah C. Kent, Fatima E. Ibrahim, Najma Mohamed, Fatima A. Abdulahi, Meagan N. O’Neal, Priya Kanajam, Ellen K. Diego | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 11 September 2024 | Published: 23 April 2025

About the author(s)

Hawa D. Mahmoud, Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Amoud University, Borama, Somalia
Sarah C. Kent, Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Amoud University, Borama, Somalia
Fatima E. Ibrahim, Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Amoud University, Borama, Somalia
Najma Mohamed, Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Amoud University, Borama, Somalia
Fatima A. Abdulahi, Department of Family Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Amoud University, Borama, Somalia
Meagan N. O'Neal, Department of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States
Priya Kanajam, College of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States
Ellen K. Diego, Division of Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States

Abstract

Background: Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy is the standard of care for neonatal respiratory distress and improves survival when implemented in low-resource settings. Clinical audits at the Borama Regional Hospital (BRH) Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) revealed multiple barriers to effective CPAP, including insufficient pressure, a lack of neonatal-sized nasal prongs, and patient interface challenges.

Aim: Improve respiratory distress by increasing effective CPAP delivery for neonates < 30 days of age from 52% to 90% in 6 months.

Setting: Single-centre referral hospital in the Awdal region of Somaliland.

Methods: Quality improvement (QI) initiative with outcomes displayed using statistical process control (SPC) charts.

Results: Eleven residents, three medical interns and seven NICU nurses completed the educational training. Forty-five patients were initiated on the locally designed bubble CPAP (bCPAP) device with a 47% (122/261) CPAP safety checklist completion rate for the three daily nursing shifts. We achieved our study aim by increasing the adherence rate to the 7-item bCPAP device set up from a baseline of 52% to 91%. The rate of infants weaned or discontinued from bCPAP for improved respiratory severity score (RSS) increased from 0% to 18% but did not demonstrate process change. There was no increase in adverse event rates (air leak, nasal columella breakdown and nasal irritation).

Conclusion: We demonstrated increased effective bCPAP delivery and decreased respiratory distress.

Contribution: This study outlines low-cost, customisable QI strategies to address commonly encountered gaps for effective bCPAP delivery in low-resource settings without access to commercially available CPAP devices or speciality-trained providers.


Keywords

quality improvement; neonatal respiratory distress; bubble continuous positive airway pressure; low- and middle-income countries; neonatal mortality; neonatal intensive care unit

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 3: Good health and well-being

Metrics

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