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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > What Global Health Programs Must Learn: Three Key Findings on Infant Healthcare Seeking

What Global Health Programs Must Learn: Three Key Findings on Infant Healthcare Seeking

GMJ
Last updated: 24/06/2026 17:52
By
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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1 Min Read
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|144 words

A major new study from Johns Hopkins researchers reveals critical insights that should reshape how child survival programs operate in sub-Saharan Africa and beyond. First, the paradoxical finding: severely ill neonates received formal care in only 8.4% to 41.8% of cases compared to 15.0% to 66.7% for mild illness—a reversal of expected behavior patterns.

Second, multivariate analysis identified infant age as the strongest predictor of healthcare seeking, not symptom severity. This suggests that cultural perceptions, economic constraints, and accessibility barriers may overwhelm clinical judgment when families make healthcare decisions.

Third, these findings demand a fundamental rethinking of intervention strategies. Rather than assuming that severe illness naturally motivates care-seeking, programs must address the underlying barriers—transportation costs, health literacy, trust in formal systems, and perceived fatalism—that prevent families from accessing emergency services precisely when their infants are most critically ill.

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ByProf. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD, is Editor-in-Chief of the Georgian Medical Journal and Chair of the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). He is Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at David Tvildiani Medical University, and Secretary/Treasurer of the UEMS Section of Public Health. ORCID: 0000-0001-7609-4515.

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