Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia

A comparative pilot study was conducted to determine the difference in the reduction of total serum bilirubin in a group of infants who had phototherapy at home compared to an in-patient group on hospital phototherapy. Eighteen infants with unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia who fitted the selection c...

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Published in:Medical Journal of Malaysia
Main Author: Zainab K.; Adlina S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2004
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-18444377875&partnerID=40&md5=da32e066e8d3353d003cdaa399a918fd
id 2-s2.0-18444377875
spelling 2-s2.0-18444377875
Zainab K.; Adlina S.
Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
2004
Medical Journal of Malaysia
59
3

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-18444377875&partnerID=40&md5=da32e066e8d3353d003cdaa399a918fd
A comparative pilot study was conducted to determine the difference in the reduction of total serum bilirubin in a group of infants who had phototherapy at home compared to an in-patient group on hospital phototherapy. Eighteen infants with unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia who fitted the selection criteria were put under the mobile home unit (Bluelite™ Portable Light) placed in the home. A control group of 18 infants with the same matching characteristics had intense phototherapy in the hospital using a unit with top and bottom light sources. The infants were matched for race, starting total serum bilirubin level, birth weight (up to 250 grams) and age of baby at initiation of phototherapy (up to one-day difference). It was observed that the mean daily decrease in serum bilirubin concentration was significantly more in the home group as compared to the hospital group (t=2.95, df=17, P<0.05). The mean duration of treatment was significantly less for the home group as compared to the hospital group (t=2.84, df=17, P<0.05). None of the infants who had home phototherapy were re-hospitalized. Phototherapy related complications were mild and comparable in both groups. The result suggests that home phototherapy is safe and effective in bringing down the concentration of serum bilirubin for term babies with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinaemia.

3005283
English
Article

author Zainab K.; Adlina S.
spellingShingle Zainab K.; Adlina S.
Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
author_facet Zainab K.; Adlina S.
author_sort Zainab K.; Adlina S.
title Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
title_short Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
title_full Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
title_fullStr Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
title_sort Effectiveness of home versus hospital phototherapy for term infants with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia: A pilot study in Pahang, Malaysia
publishDate 2004
container_title Medical Journal of Malaysia
container_volume 59
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-18444377875&partnerID=40&md5=da32e066e8d3353d003cdaa399a918fd
description A comparative pilot study was conducted to determine the difference in the reduction of total serum bilirubin in a group of infants who had phototherapy at home compared to an in-patient group on hospital phototherapy. Eighteen infants with unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia who fitted the selection criteria were put under the mobile home unit (Bluelite™ Portable Light) placed in the home. A control group of 18 infants with the same matching characteristics had intense phototherapy in the hospital using a unit with top and bottom light sources. The infants were matched for race, starting total serum bilirubin level, birth weight (up to 250 grams) and age of baby at initiation of phototherapy (up to one-day difference). It was observed that the mean daily decrease in serum bilirubin concentration was significantly more in the home group as compared to the hospital group (t=2.95, df=17, P<0.05). The mean duration of treatment was significantly less for the home group as compared to the hospital group (t=2.84, df=17, P<0.05). None of the infants who had home phototherapy were re-hospitalized. Phototherapy related complications were mild and comparable in both groups. The result suggests that home phototherapy is safe and effective in bringing down the concentration of serum bilirubin for term babies with uncomplicated hyperbilirubinaemia.
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