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  3. What Is Phototherapy?
Course Content
Lesson 1: Introduction to Newborn Jaundice
• What is jaundice? • Normal vs. pathological jaundice • Why it matters for African families • 🌍 Real-life case vignette from Nigeria
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Lesson 2: Causes of Jaundice in African Babies
• Immature liver function • Blood type incompatibility (ABO, Rh) • G6PD deficiency & common African genetic factors • Prematurity, sepsis, and birth trauma
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Lesson 3: Signs & Symptoms to Watch Out For
• Yellowing of eyes, palms, skin • Poor feeding, fever, sleepiness • When jaundice starts and how long it lasts • 📥 Printable "Jaundice Home Monitoring Card"
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Lesson 4: Myths vs. Medical Truths
• Debunking common African beliefs: "Jaundice is from bad breastmilk" "She must have looked at the sun!" "Rub with herbs or charcoal water" • What science actually says
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Lesson 5: Diagnosis and Tests
• Bilirubin testing and why it matters • Skin testing vs. blood tests • Where to access reliable testing
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Lesson 6: Home Care & What to Avoid
• Safe sun exposure: timing, position, dangers • Breastfeeding guidance • Dangerous practices (herbs, delay in care, sugar water)
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Lesson 7: Medical Treatment Options
• What is phototherapy? • When blood transfusion is needed • Hospital referral process in Africa • 🌐 Links to verified jaundice treatment centres
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Lesson 8: When to Go to Hospital or Call a CHW
• Red flag symptoms • Who to contact • 📞 Emergency hotline list by region
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Lesson 9: Follow-Up and Long-Term Care
• Monitoring for brain damage (kernicterus) • How jaundice may affect feeding, hearing, learning • Ensuring child development support
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Lesson 10: African Community Stories & Case Studies
• Testimonies from mothers in Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda • CHW experiences: Early detection saves lives • What worked in low-resource rural areas
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Understanding and Managing Newborn Jaundice: A Guide for African Mothers

🎯 Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:
✅ Define phototherapy and how it treats newborn jaundice
✅ Describe what to expect during phototherapy treatment
✅ Understand when phototherapy is necessary
✅ Debunk myths and explain safety of the procedure


💡 What Is Phototherapy?

Phototherapy is a special light treatment used in hospitals to lower high levels of bilirubin in a jaundiced baby’s blood. The blue light helps break down bilirubin in the skin, so it can be passed out in the baby’s urine and stool.

🌞 Think of phototherapy like a powerful medical version of early morning sunlight — focused, safe, and much more effective.


🧪 How Does It Work?

  • The special blue light (wavelength 460–490 nm) transforms bilirubin into a water-soluble form.

  • The baby’s liver can now easily remove it from the body.

  • Treatment continues until bilirubin levels return to safe range.

📚 WHO Neonatal Jaundice Guidance:
🔗 https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240049072


🏥 What Happens During Phototherapy?

Step What to Expect
1. Baby Undressed Baby will wear only a diaper to expose skin to the light
2. Eye Protection Eyes are covered with soft pads to prevent light damage
3. Light Placement Light is placed above or below baby, depending on machine type
4. Feeding Continues Breastfeeding is encouraged; baby may be removed temporarily to feed
5. Monitoring Nurses check baby’s temperature, weight, and bilirubin levels every few hours

🔄 Duration of Treatment

  • Usually lasts 1–3 days

  • Stops when bilirubin drops to a safe level

  • Some babies may need longer if levels are very high


⚠️ When Is Phototherapy Needed?

Not all jaundiced babies need phototherapy. It depends on:

Condition Explanation
Bilirubin level If it crosses danger levels (depends on baby’s age & weight)
Baby’s age Younger babies (Day 1–2) with jaundice need urgent care
Premature birth Preemies can’t clear bilirubin well, so they need earlier treatment
Signs of severe illness Poor feeding, fever, seizures, extreme sleepiness

🎯 Doctors often use the Bilitool or WHO treatment thresholds.
🔗 https://www.bilitool.org


✅ Phototherapy Is Safe

Myth Truth
“It burns the baby” No. The lights are filtered and safe for baby’s skin
“It makes baby blind” Eyes are always protected. No harm when used correctly
“Only white babies use light” False. All races benefit. In fact, Black babies are often underdetected, so light is vital

🌍 Real African Example

At a rural hospital in Kisii, Kenya, a CHW referred a 2-day-old baby with yellow eyes and poor feeding. Blood tests showed dangerously high bilirubin. Phototherapy started within an hour. The baby improved in 48 hours and went home safely.


📸 Types of Phototherapy Machines Seen in Africa

Type Description
Overhead LED Unit Most common; hangs above crib or warmer
Fiber-optic Blanket Light from below; good for small babies or transport
Double-sided Phototherapy Used for very high bilirubin levels or in NICUs

🛠 Some units are donated by NGOs or supplied through national newborn care programs.


📝 Mini Quiz – What Is Phototherapy?

Q1. What does phototherapy treat?
A. Fever
B. High bilirubin (jaundice)
C. Cough
D. Diarrhea

Answer: B
Rationale: Phototherapy is used to reduce dangerous bilirubin levels in the blood.


Q2. What color of light is used in phototherapy?
A. Green
B. Red
C. Blue
D. White

Answer: C – Blue
Rationale: Blue light helps break down bilirubin effectively.


Q3. During phototherapy, what should always be protected?
A. Baby’s feet
B. Baby’s ears
C. Baby’s eyes
D. Baby’s hair

Answer: C – Eyes
Rationale: The light can damage newborn eyes if not protected with special eye covers.

MamaTotoBot - Maternal & Child Health Assistant