Sujeewa Amarasena
University of Ruhuna
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Paediatrics and International Child Health | 2015
Jai K Das; Arjumand Rizvi; Zaid Bhatti; Vinod K. Paul; Rajiv Bahl; Mohammod Shahidullah; Dharma Manandhar; Hedayatullah Stanekzai; Sujeewa Amarasena; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta
Abstract The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is an organization of eight countries – Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan. The major objectives of this review are to examine trends and progress in newborn and neonatal health care in the region. A landscape analysis of the current state of neonatal mortality, stillbirths and trends over the years for each country and the effective interventions to reduce neonatal mortality and stillbirths was undertaken. A modelling exercise using the Lives Saved Tool (LiST) was also undertaken to determine the impact of scaling up a set of essential interventions on neonatal mortality and stillbirths. The findings demonstrate that there is an unacceptably high and uneven burden of neonatal mortality and stillbirths in the region which together account for 39% of global neonatal deaths and 41% of global stillbirths. Progress is uneven across countries in the region, with five of the eight SAARC countries having reduced their neonatal mortality rate by more than 50% since 1990, while India (43%), Afghanistan (29%) and Pakistan (25%) have made slower progress and will not reach their MDG4 targets. The major causes of neonatal mortality are intrapartum-related deaths, preterm birth complications and sepsis which account for nearly 80% of all deaths. The LiST analysis shows that a gradual increase in coverage of proven available interventions until 2020 followed by a uniform scale-up to 90% of all interventions until 2030 could avert 52% of neonatal deaths (0.71 million), 29% of stillbirths (0.31 million) and achieve a 31% reduction in maternal deaths (0.25 million). The analysis demonstrates that the Maldives and Sri Lanka have done remarkably well while other countries need greater attention and specific focus on strategies to improve neonatal health.
Journal of Nutrition | 2015
Thushari Bandara; Manjula Hettiarachchi; Chandrani Liyanage; Sujeewa Amarasena; William W. Wong
BACKGROUND The WHO recommends that exclusive breastfeeding should last up to 6 mo. However, human milk intake of Sri Lankan infants has not been quantified scientifically. OBJECTIVES The objectives of this study were to measure the human milk intake of Sri Lankan infants during the first 6 mo of age and to document the breastfeeding practices of their mothers. METHODS Forty-eight healthy mother-infant dyads were randomly recruited for this cross-sectional study at well-baby clinics. Milk intake was measured using the deuterium oxide-to-the-mother technique over a period of 2 wk. Information on breastfeeding practice and living standards of the participants were gathered using an interviewer-administered questionnaire. RESULTS Human milk intake was 672 ± 123 g ⋅ d(-1) (mean ± SD), 776 ± 212 g ⋅ d(-1), and 801 ± 51 g ⋅ d(-1) for infants <2 mo, 2 to <4 mo, and 4-6 mo of age, respectively. The milk intakes were not different among the age groups. Maternal body composition, age, or parity had no effects on milk intake of the infants. However, mothers education : P < 0.05, r = 0.35), infants age (P < 0.05, r = 0.30), and body mass index (P < 0.05, r = 0.41 : positively correlated with the milk intake. Over 63% of mothers had commenced breastfeeding within 30 min of delivery. About 60% of the mothers were feeding the baby 6-10 times during the daytime and >81% intended to continue exclusive breastfeeding until 6 mo of age. CONCLUSION This study, for the first time, documented the adequacy of breast-milk intake among Sri Lankan infants and the nutrition status of the mothers.
Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics | 2015
Thushari Bandara; Manjula Hettiarachchi; Chandrani Liyanage; Sujeewa Amarasena
BMC Health Services Research | 2014
Manjula Hettiarachchi; Sujeewa Amarasena
BMC Pediatrics | 2015
Thushari Bandara; Manjula Hettiarachchi; Chandrani Liyanage; Sujeewa Amarasena; William W. Wong
Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health | 2009
Sujeewa Amarasena; M G K. Samanlatha; M H A D de Silva; P Kolombage
Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health | 2008
Sujeewa Amarasena
Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health | 2008
Sujeewa Amarasena
Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health | 2018
Chamal Imalke Kankananarachchi; Nuwan Dilanke Wickramasinghe; Sadani Rajika Vithana; Thilina Madushanka Munasinghe; Sujeewa Amarasena
Archive | 2015
Thushari Bandara; Manjula Hettiarachchi; Chandrani Liyanage; Sujeewa Amarasena; William W. Wong