Baby deaths shock Turkey

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Posted on 26th September 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 9/26/2008 8:01 AM

By SUZAN FRASER
Associated Press Writer

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) _ Outside the Zekai Tahir Burak maternity hospital stands a bronze statue of a mother nursing a baby with an inscription from the Prophet Mohammed: “Paradise lies at the feet of the mother.”

In July, the Ankara facility became the scene of any parent’s hell: A total of 27 newborns died here within two weeks, most of them from infection.

Now Turkey is reeling from a similar tragedy at another hospital, this time in the western city of Izmir, where 13 premature babies died last weekend within 24 hours, apparently from tainted IV treatment.

The deaths at two of the nation’s most modern maternity hospitals go to the heart of Turkey’s uncertain status as a country energetically seeking to modernize in its bid to join the European Union — but held back by problems associated with the developing world.

The scandals have exposed a shortfall in the number of specialized neonatal units dealing with premature and high-risk babies as well as a shortage of qualified staff in a country of 70 million.

Most hospitals lack specialized premature birth units, and high-risk or premature babies are often transferred to larger hospitals in cities such Istanbul, Ankara or Izmir. The transfer and high concentration of newborns in the same place increases the risk of infections, experts say.

“There just isn’t the facility that allows a premature baby to survive in the hospital that it was born in,” said Bedriye Yorgun, who heads the Ankara-based Health and Social Services Workers’ Union, which advocates improved health services. “When the babies are transferred, there is a higher chance of exposure to infection and of spreading an infection.”

The government has acknowledged a shortage and has said it plans to increase the number of neonatal wards nationwide from the current 156 to 200 by 2010. It has also admitted to a shortage of more than 400 specialized doctors and thousands of nurses.

After the first deaths at the capital’s Zekai Tahir Burak maternity hospital, a team of government-appointed doctors said a staff shortage had increased the risk of infection.

Dr. Fahri Ovali, one of the doctors, told reporters: “There were four high-risk babies for every nurse.”

The Izmir tragedy caused a renewed explosion of outrage in this country where children are cherished and people will often stop to show affection to other people’s kids.

“Such shame does not exist elsewhere in the world,” read a headline in Bugun newspaper. “13 mothers’ arms left empty,” said Aksam newspaper.

A preliminary investigation concluded that the infants died of a bacterial infection spread by IV treatment. Further investigation is under way to see how the bacteria got mixed with the intravenous solution used to treat the infants at Izmir’s Tepecik hospital. The bodies of three of the babies, who were buried immediately after their deaths, were exhumed to help with the investigation.

Izmir health department head Mehmet Ozkan said the hospital believed the babies were not neglected. After the 13 deaths, the unit was placed under quarantine and no new babies have been admitted.

Some of the families have filed complaints against the hospital accusing its directors of negligence. A local prosecutor has also launched a criminal investigation into the deaths, while the main opposition party has called for a parliamentary debate on the deaths.

A chief obstetrician at Etlik Zubeyde Hanim hospital said a government decree forcing hospitals not to turn away any patients was to blame.

“If there are no spare incubators and you are forced to admit more and more babies, what do you do? You have to put two babies into the same incubator, which increases the possibility of infections,” he said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue and because as a state-employee, he is not authorized to speak to journalists.

Yorgun, who heads the health workers’ union agreed.

“The government is telling the people that no one will be turned away from hospitals, but it is not creating the conditions to allow doctors to treat everyone,” she said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

Turkey investigates hospital deaths of 27 babies

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Posted on 4th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/4/2008 1:09 PM

By SUZAN FRASER
Associated Press Writer

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) _ Turkey’s Health Ministry launched an investigation Monday into the deaths of more than two dozen newborn babies at a hospital in Ankara.

The Zekai Tahir Burak hospital has acknowledged that 27 babies died there in the past two weeks, but said most had died from complications related to premature delivery.

Most of the 26,000 babies born each year or admitted to Zekai Tahir Burak are premature, as the hospital handles high-risk births. The hospital could not immediately say how many babies were delivered in the two week period involving the 27 deaths.

Turkey’s infant mortality rate in 2005 was 23.6 in 1,000, relatively high compared with neighboring Greece, where 3.8 in 1,000 newborns died the same year, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.

But a health workers union said 27 recent deaths in two weeks at the state-run hospital in Ankara was too high, and blamed poor sanitary conditions and negligence.

Health Minister Recep Akdag ordered an inquiry into the deaths, and the ministry set up a team of investigators to look into practices at the hospital, which has one of the busiest maternity wards in the capital. The hospital says it has capacity for 122 newborns at a time, but often has up to 180.

The ministry said the results of the investigation would be made public.

“The necessary measures will be taken if anyone is found to be at fault,” it said in a statement.

Over the weekend, Dr. Ugur Dilmen, who heads the hospital’s newborn unit, said the babies’ deaths were the result of birth defects, heart failure, hernia, hypertension and stillbirth.

The hospital said tests had ruled out infection as a possible cause.

“None of the deaths were caused by a hospital infection,” chief physician Leyla Mollamahmutoglu said.

The Health and Social Services Workers union, however, questioned the hospital’s sanitary conditions. Union chief Kemal Yilmaz said Monday that visitors entered the newborn unit with plastic booties over shoes, but no masks.

Yilmaz also suggested the hospital was understaffed and overcrowded, with up to three newborns placed in one incubator.

He demanded the hospital answer questions about how many babies each nurse is responsible for, and whether any of the babies who died had been given antibiotics, among other queries.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.