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2023 Faculty of Clinical Medicine and Dentistry EURASIAN EXPERIMENT JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Prevalence and Factors Influencing Low Birth Weight among Parturients Aged 18-30 Years at Jinja Regional Referral Hospital, Jinja District, Uganda

Namazzi Olivia

The study was done to assess the factors contributing to low birth weights among neonates born at JRRH. Afacility based retrospective descriptive cross-sectional study will be conducted at JRRH from October 2019 toJanuary 2020 among women delivering neonates during the study period. The study was done in Jinja RegionalReferral Hospital is located in the center of Jinja, not far from the Source of the Nile. The age distribution ofmothers, residence, marital status and tribe. The mean age of mothers was 18 (Range 13–18) with majority ofmothers aged 15– 19 years. Majority (62.0%) of mothers were married. Most (66.5 mothers were Baganda and theleast (4.5%) were Basoga. Majority (78.8%) were residing in urban areas while the least (21.2%) were residing inrural areas. A total of 46/179 babies weighed below 2.5 kg, giving a prevalence of 25.7%. 133/179 (74.3%) of babiesweighed between 2.5–5.0 kg (Table 2). The overall mean birth weight was 2.9 (range 1.0–5.0 kg). Among low-birthweightbabies (< 2.5 kg), the mean was 2.1 (Range 1–2.4 kg). Among babies with birth weight 2.5–5.0 kg, themean birth weight was 3.1 (Range 2.5–5.0). There were slightly more female than male babies, (51.4%) and (48.6%)respectively as shown in the table 2 below; Majority (77.7%) of the babies born were the first born and most of thebabies were delivered at term (83.8%). 5% of the babies had congenital anomalies. The prevalence of LBW amongour study population was high, 25.5%. Pre-term delivery and multiple pregnancies were associated with LBW.Health workers should encourage teenage mothers to attend focused antenatal care as recommended by Ministryof Health, Uganda. A specialized maternal facility Centre that is friendly for adolescent/teenage mothers isadvisable so as to improve on completion rates and handle high risk pregnancies.