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Dive into the research topics where Mary V Kinney is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary V Kinney.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2009

Two million intrapartum-related stillbirths and neonatal deaths: Where, why, and what can be done?

Joy E Lawn; Anne C C Lee; Mary V Kinney; Lynn M. Sibley; Wally A. Carlo; Vinod K. Paul; Robert Clive Pattinson; Gary L. Darmstadt

Intrapartum‐related neonatal deaths (“birth asphyxia”) are a leading cause of child mortality globally, outnumbering deaths from malaria. Reduction is crucial to meeting the fourth Millennium Development Goal (MDG), and is intimately linked to intrapartum stillbirths as well as maternal health and MDG 5, yet there is a lack of consensus on what works, especially in weak health systems.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

Sub-Saharan Africa's Mothers, Newborns, and Children: Where and Why Do They Die?

Mary V Kinney; Kate Kerber; Robert E. Black; Barney Cohen; Francis Nkrumah; Hoosen Coovadia; Paul Nampala; Joy E Lawn

In the first article in a series on maternal, newborn, and child health in sub-Saharan Africa, Joy Lawn and colleagues outline where and why deaths among mothers and children occur and what known interventions can be employed to prevent these deaths.


Health Policy and Planning | 2012

Newborn survival in Uganda: a decade of change and future implications

Y V Pradhan; Shyam Raj Upreti; Naresh Pratap Kc; Ashish Kc; Neena Khadka; Uzma Syed; Mary V Kinney; Ramesh Kant Adhikari; Parashu Ram Shrestha; Kusum Thapa; Amit Bhandari; Kristina Grear; Tanya Guenther; Stephen Wall

Each year in Uganda 141 000 children die before reaching their fifth birthday; 26% of these children die in their first month of life. In a setting of persistently high fertility rates, a crisis in human resources for health and a recent history of civil unrest, Uganda has prioritized Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 for child and maternal survival. As part of a multi-country analysis we examined change for newborn survival over the past decade through mortality and health system coverage indicators as well as national and donor funding for health, and policy and programme change. Between 2000 and 2010 Ugandas neonatal mortality rate reduced by 2.2% per year, which is greater than the regional average rate of decline but slower than national reductions in maternal mortality and under-five mortality after the neonatal period. While existing population-based data are insufficient to measure national changes in coverage and quality of services, national attention for maternal and child health has been clear and authorized from the highest levels. Attention and policy change for newborn health is comparatively recent. This recognized gap has led to a specific focus on newborn health through a national Newborn Steering Committee, which has been given a mandate from the Ministry of Health to advise on newborn survival issues since 2006. This multi-disciplinary and inter-agency network of stakeholders has been able to preside over a number of important policy changes at the level of facility care, education and training, community-based service delivery through Village Health Teams and changes to essential drugs and commodities. The committees comprehensive reach has enabled rapid policy change and increased attention to newborn survival in a relatively short space of time. Translating this favourable policy environment into district-level implementation and high quality services is now the priority.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2009

Reducing intrapartum-related deaths and disability: Can the health system deliver?

Joy E Lawn; Mary V Kinney; Anne C C Lee; Mickey Chopra; Vinod K. Paul; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Massee Bateman; Gary L. Darmstadt

Each year 1.02 million intrapartum stillbirths and 904 000 intrapartum‐related neonatal deaths (formerly called “birth asphyxia”) occur, closely linked to 536 000 maternal deaths, an estimated 42% of which are intrapartum‐related.


Health Policy and Planning | 2012

Newborn survival: a multi-country analysis of a decade of change.

Joy E Lawn; Mary V Kinney; Robert E Black; Catherine Pitt; Simon Cousens; Kate Kerber; Erica Corbett; Allisyn C. Moran; Claudia S. Morrissey; Mikkel Z. Oestergaard

Neonatal deaths account for 40% of global under-five mortality and are ever more important if we are to achieve the Millennium Development Goal 4 (MDG 4) on child survival. We applied a results framework to evaluate global and national changes for neonatal mortality rates (NMR), healthy behaviours, intervention coverage, health system change, and inputs including funding, while considering contextual changes. The average annual rate of reduction of NMR globally accelerated between 2000 and 2010 (2.1% per year) compared with the 1990s, but was slower than the reduction in mortality of children aged 1-59 months (2.9% per year) and maternal mortality (4.2% per year). Regional variation of NMR change ranged from 3.0% per year in developed countries to 1.5% per year in sub-Saharan Africa. Some countries have made remarkable progress despite major challenges. Our statistical analysis identifies inter-country predictors of NMR reduction including high baseline NMR, and changes in income or fertility. Changes in intervention or package coverage did not appear to be important predictors in any region, but coverage data are lacking for several neonatal-specific interventions. Mortality due to neonatal infection deaths, notably tetanus, decreased, and deaths from complications of preterm birth are increasingly important. Official development assistance for maternal, newborn and child health doubled from 2003 to 2008, yet by 2008 only 6% of this aid mentioned newborns, and a mere 0.1% (US


The Lancet | 2014

Every Newborn: health-systems bottlenecks and strategies to accelerate scale-up in countries

Kim E Dickson; Aline Simen-Kapeu; Mary V Kinney; Luis Huicho; Linda Vesel; Eve M. Lackritz; Joseph de Graft Johnson; Severin von Xylander; Nuzhat Rafique; Mariame Sylla; Charles Mwansambo; Bernadette Daelmans; Joy E Lawn

4.56m) exclusively targeted newborn care. The amount of newborn survival data and the evidence based increased, as did recognition in donor funding. Over this decade, NMR reduction seems more related to change in context, such as socio-economic factors, than to increasing intervention coverage. High impact cost-effective interventions hold great potential to save newborn lives especially in the highest burden countries. Accelerating progress requires data-driven investments and addressing context-specific implementation realities.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

Sub-Saharan Africa's mothers, newborns, and children: how many lives could be saved with targeted health interventions?

Ingrid K. Friberg; Mary V Kinney; Joy E Lawn; Kate Kerber; M. Oladoyin Odubanjo; Anne Marie Bergh; Neff Walker; Eva Weissman; Mickey Chopra; Robert E. Black

Universal coverage of essential interventions would reduce neonatal deaths by an estimated 71%, benefit women and children after the first month, and reduce stillbirths. However, the packages with the greatest effect (care around birth, care of small and ill newborn babies), have low and inequitable coverage and are the most sensitive markers of health system function. In eight of the 13 countries with the most neonatal deaths (55% worldwide), we undertook a systematic assessment of bottlenecks to essential maternal and newborn health care, involving more than 600 experts. Of 2465 bottlenecks identified, common constraints were found in all high-burden countries, notably regarding the health workforce, financing, and service delivery. However, bottlenecks for specific interventions might differ across similar health systems. For example, the implementation of kangaroo mother care was noted as challenging in the four Asian country workshops, but was regarded as a feasible aspect of preterm care by respondents in the four African countries. If all high-burden countries achieved the neonatal mortality rates of their regions fastest progressing countries, then the mortality goal of ten or fewer per 1000 livebirths by 2035 recommended in this Series and the Every Newborn Action Plan would be exceeded. We therefore examined fast progressing countries to identify strategies to reduce neonatal mortality. We identified several key factors: (1) workforce planning to increase numbers and upgrade specific skills for care at birth and of small and ill newborn babies, task sharing, incentives for rural health workers; (2) financial protection measures, such as expansion of health insurance, conditional cash transfers, and performance-based financing; and (3) dynamic leadership including innovation and community empowerment. Adapting from the 2005 Lancet Series on neonatal survival and drawing on this Every Newborn Series, we propose a country-led, data-driven process to sharpen national health plans, seize opportunities to address the quality gap for care at birth and care of small and ill newborn babies, and systematically scale up care to reach every mother and newborn baby, particularly the poorest.


The Lancet | 2014

Who has been caring for the baby

Gary L. Darmstadt; Mary V Kinney; Mickey Chopra; Simon Cousens; Lily Kak; Vinod K. Paul; Jose Martines; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Joy E Lawn

As part of the series on maternal, neonatal, and child health in sub-Saharan Africa, Robert Black and colleagues estimated mortality reduction for 42 countries and conclude that the use of local data is needed to prioritize the most effective mix of interventions.


The Lancet | 2016

Stillbirths: ending preventable deaths by 2030

Luc de Bernis; Mary V Kinney; William Stones; Petra ten Hoope-Bender; Donna Vivio; Susannah Hopkins Leisher; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Metin Gülmezoglu; Matthews Mathai; José M. Belizán; Lynne Franco; Lori McDougall; Jennifer Zeitlin; Address Malata; Kim E Dickson; Joy E Lawn

Nearly a decade ago, The Lancet published the Neonatal Survival Series, with an ambitious call for integration of newborn care across the continuum of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health and nutrition (RMNCH). In this first of five papers in the Every Newborn Series, we consider what has changed during this decade, assessing progress on the basis of a systematic policy heuristic including agenda-setting, policy formulation and adoption, leadership and partnership, implementation, and evaluation of effect. Substantial progress has been made in agenda setting and policy formulation for newborn health, as witnessed by the shift from maternal and child health to maternal, newborn, and child health as a standard. However, investment and large-scale implementation have been disappointingly small, especially in view of the size of the burden and potential for rapid change and synergies throughout the RMNCH continuum. Moreover, stillbirths remain invisible on the global health agenda. Hence that progress in improvement of newborn survival and reduction of stillbirths lags behind that of maternal mortality and deaths for children aged 1-59 months is not surprising. Faster progress is possible, but with several requirements: clear communication of the interventions with the greatest effect and how to overcome bottlenecks for scale-up; national leadership, and technical capacity to integrate and implement these interventions; global coordination of partners, especially within countries, in provision of technical assistance and increased funding; increased domestic investment in newborn health, and access to specific commodities and equipment where needed; better data to monitor progress, with local data used for programme improvement; and accountability for results at all levels, including demand from communities and mortality targets in the post-2015 framework. Who will step up during the next decade to ensure decision making in countries leads to implementation of stillbirth and newborn health interventions within RMNCH programmes?


BMJ | 2015

Ending preventable maternal and newborn mortality and stillbirths

Doris Chou; Bernadette Daelmans; R. Rima Jolivet; Mary V Kinney; Lale Say

Efforts to achieve the new worldwide goals for maternal and child survival will also prevent stillbirth and improve health and developmental outcomes. However, the number of annual stillbirths remains unchanged since 2011 and is unacceptably high: an estimated 2.6 million in 2015. Failure to consistently include global targets or indicators for stillbirth in post-2015 initiatives shows that stillbirths are hidden in the worldwide agenda. This Series paper summarises findings from previous papers in this Series, presents new analyses, and proposes specific criteria for successful integration of stillbirths into post-2015 initiatives for womens and childrens health. Five priority areas to change the stillbirth trend include intentional leadership; increased voice, especially of women; implementation of integrated interventions with commensurate investment; indicators to measure effect of interventions and especially to monitor progress; and investigation into crucial knowledge gaps. The post-2015 agenda represents opportunities for all stakeholders to act together to end all preventable deaths, including stillbirths.

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Tanya Doherty

South African Medical Research Council

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Vinod K. Paul

All India Institute of Medical Sciences

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Anne C C Lee

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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