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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > New Data: Severe Infant Illness Associated with Lower Healthcare Seeking Rates

New Data: Severe Infant Illness Associated with Lower Healthcare Seeking Rates

GMJ
Last updated: 07/06/2026 17:52
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Healthcare worker examining infant in African clinic setting
New research reveals parents seek medical care for severely ill infants only 8.4%-41.8% of the time, compared to 66.7% for mild illness. Johns Hopkins study develops simple two-sign assessment tool for identifying illness severity.
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1 min read|140 words

A comprehensive analysis spanning seven countries has documented stark disparities in formal healthcare access based on illness severity. According to the study published in PLOS Global Public Health, only 8.4% to 41.8% of severely ill neonates received formal healthcare compared to 15.0% to 66.7% of those with mild illness.

This surprising statistical finding emerged from an examination of 5,003 infant deaths across sub-Saharan Africa and Pakistan. Researchers developed a two-sign severity assessment method based on activity level and feeding behavior to classify cases consistently across diverse healthcare settings.

The data underscore a critical gap between clinical need and healthcare access in resource-limited settings. Understanding these patterns is essential for public health officials and program designers working to improve neonatal and infant survival outcomes in low- and middle-income countries, where the majority of preventable child deaths continue to occur.

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