Mothers carrying babies skin-to-skin could significantly cut global death and disability rates from premature birth, a leading expert has said.
Prof Joy Lawn says "kangaroo care", not expensive intensive care, is the key.
The 15 million babies every year born at or before 37 weeks gestation account for about 10% of the global burden of disease, and one million of them die.
Of those who survive, just under 3% have moderate or severe impairments and 4.4% have mild impairments.
Prof Lawn, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), said: "The perception is you need intensive care for pre-term babies,
"But 85% of babies born premature are six weeks early or less. They need help feeding, with temperature control and they are more prone to infection.
"It's really only before 32 weeks that their lungs are immature and they need help breathing, She added: "Unless there are those breathing problems, kangaroo care is actually better because it promotes breastfeeding and reduces infection."
Speaking ahead of World Prematurity Day on Friday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who leads the Every Woman Every Child movement, which promotes improvements to healthcare for women and children, said: "Three-quarters of the one million babies who die each year from complications associated with prematurity could have been saved with cost-effective interventions, even without intensive care facilities."
Source: BBC NEWS
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