By Iyemah David
The World Health Organisation (WHO) and Nigeria’s Federal Government and the are advancing efforts to reduce newborn deaths through evidence-based management of Possible Serious Bacterial Infections (PSBI).
Emerging research suggests that many of such cases can be safely treated outside hospitals.
Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Professor Muhammad Ali Pate said this on Wednesday in Abuja, at a one-day national dissemination meeting.
The meeting was called to present findings from a multi-country study on the management of PSBI in infants.
The study which included Nigeria, examined whether outpatient treatment was a safe and effective alternative to inpatient care for low-risk cases where hospital referral is not feasible, building on evidence from the AFRINEST study and WHO guidelines.
The meeting brought together stakeholders to review results, discuss policy and program implications, and explore how the findings can improve infant survival and health system response in Nigeria.
Prof. Pate was represented by Dr John Ovuroaye, Director, Family Health Department, FMOH.
He said that Nigeria was committed to ensuring that every newborn has access to timely, life-saving care through the integration of PSBI management into national child health strategies.
The Minister said the Federal Government had adopted global recommendations on PSBI and incorporated them into some frameworks.
He listed the frameworks to include the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) and the Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH) strategy.
He said the approach allowed selected cases of newborn infections to be managed at the primary healthcare level where referral to higher facilities is not feasible, particularly in underserved communities.
Dr Yasir Bin Nisar, of the Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health (MCA), WHO Nigeria, said the new clinical trial findings could reshape both global and national treatment policies.
He said that it would allow more cases to be managed outside hospitals.
Dr Nisar said evidence from recent studies showed that a significant proportion of young infants with PSBI could be safely treated on an outpatient basis or discharged early after short hospital care with oral antibiotics.
“Findings from recent trials demonstrate that outpatient care can be as effective as inpatient management in selected groups of infants, with significantly lower mortality risk,” he said.
According to him, PSBI refers to a group of life-threatening conditions in newborns and young infants.
“They include sepsis, pneumonia, meningitis and other severe infections, often identified through clinical danger signs such as fast breathing, poor feeding, convulsions, and abnormal body temperature.
“According to WHO data, an estimated 6.9 million PSBI cases occur globally each year, with the highest burden in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, including Nigeria.”
He said that the diagnostic criteria for PSBI had a sensitivity of about 85 per cent and specificity of 75 per cent, making early identification critical for survival.
He said that moderate-risk clinical signs such as poor feeding, low body temperature, and reduced movement showed varying case fatality rates depending on whether infants were managed as inpatients or outpatients.
“For example, infants with multiple danger signs recorded a case fatality rate of 4.9 per cent under outpatient care compared to 26.3 per cent among those managed in inpatient settings in some classifications.
“Similarly, critical illness cases recorded the highest mortality, with rates above 20 per cent in hospital-based management,” he said.
He referenced published evidence, including a 2021 PLOS ONE study.
The publication showed that many infants previously referred automatically for hospital admission could be safely managed at the primary health care level under structured protocols.
He said two major trials demonstrated that a large proportion of PSBI cases could either be managed entirely as outpatients or treated with a short initial hospital stay followed by oral antibiotics.
“Outpatient management reduces hospital burden, lowers costs for families, and decreases the risk of hospital-acquired infections, while maintaining treatment effectiveness in selected cases,” he said.
He said that early switch therapy, where infants are discharged after two days of injectable antibiotics to continue oral treatment, also reduced hospital stay by up to five days per episode.
The WHO expert said that before 2015, nearly all PSBI cases required full inpatient referral, adding that new evidence has significantly changed the approach.
He said current recommendations now support a more differentiated model, with about 50 per cent of low-risk cases managed as outpatients.
“20 per cent is receiving short inpatient care with step-down oral therapy, and only about five per cent require full inpatient treatment for critical illness.
He called for urgent policy updates, revision of training materials, improved health worker capacity, and strengthened implementation research to support scale-up,” he said.
He said such reforms would ensure that evidence from clinical trials is translated into real-world improvements in newborn survival, particularly in low-resource settings like Nigeria.
The workshop brought together policymakers, health experts, researchers, and development partners to review evidence on newborn infection management and its implications for child survival strategies.
