Abstract:
Background: Globally, about 2.7 million neonates die annually and more than 99% of these deaths happened in
developing countries. Although most neonatal deaths are preventable and attempts had been taken to tackle these
deaths, an aggregate of 30 neonatal deaths per 1000 live births had been reported in Ethiopia. In this regard,
identifying the predictors could be an important step. However, evidence on the incidence and predictors of
neonatal mortality has been limited in Ethiopia, in the study area in particular. Even the available studies were
limited in scope and were retrospective or cross section in nature. Thus, this study is aimed at assessing the
incidence and predictors of neonatal mortality among neonates admitted in Amhara regional state referral
hospitals, Ethiopia..
Method: A multi center prospective follow up study was conducted on 612 neonates admitted in Amhara region
referral hospitals from July 01 to August 30, 2018. A simple random sampling technique was used to select three of
all referral hospitals in the study settings and all neonates admitted in the selected hospitals were included. Data
were entered into Epi info version 7.0 and exported to STATA 14.0 for analysis. Cox proportional hazard regression
model was fitted to identify predictors of neonatal mortality. Crude and Adjusted hazard ratio with 95% confidence
interval was computed and variables’ statistical significance was declared based on its AHR with 95% CI and p-value
≤0.05.
Result: Overall, 144 (18.6%) neonates died with a total person-time of 4177.803 neonate-days which is equivalent to the
neonatal mortality rate of 186 per 1000 admitted neonates with 95% CI (157,219). The incidence rate of neonatal mortality
was 27 per 1000 admitted neonates with 95%CI (23, 33). Maternal age ≥ 35 years (AHR = 2.60; 95%CI: 1.44, 4.72), mothers
unable to read and write (AHR = 1.40; 95%CI: 1.23, 2.44), multiple pregnancy (AHR = 3.96; 95%CI: 2.10, 7.43) and positive
maternal HIV status (AHR = 6.57; 95%CI: 2.53, 17.06) were predictors of neonatal mortality