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  3. How Jaundice May Affect Feeding, Hearing & Learning
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:
✅ Explain how severe or untreated jaundice affects brain areas linked to feeding, hearing, and learning
✅ Monitor newborns and infants for related problems
✅ Know where and when to refer for support


🧠 How Jaundice Affects a Baby’s Development

When jaundice becomes severe and is not treated in time, high levels of bilirubin enter the baby’s brain and damage certain areas—especially those that control:

  • Feeding and sucking

  • Hearing

  • Movement and coordination

  • Memory and learning

This damage is called kernicterus (see Lesson 9.1). It can cause lifelong disabilities.


🍼 Feeding Difficulties from Jaundice

What to Look For:

Age Signs
Newborn Poor suckling, weak cry, refuses breast
1–3 months Cannot coordinate suck-swallow-breathe pattern
Ongoing Gagging, poor weight gain, frequent choking

👩🏿‍⚕️ Why It Happens:
Bilirubin affects brainstem areas responsible for feeding reflexes.

📍Care Tip: Encourage mothers to breastfeed frequently if baby is stable, and refer for feeding therapy if poor suck persists beyond 2 weeks.

🔗 Tool: WHO Infant Feeding Guide – https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240063870


👂 Hearing Loss Due to Severe Jaundice

Red Flags:

  • Baby does not startle at loud sounds (by 1–2 months)

  • Doesn’t respond to mother’s voice

  • Speech delay in toddler years

👂 Why It Happens:
Bilirubin damages the auditory nerve (cranial nerve VIII) — often permanent if not detected early.

🧏‍♀️ Jaundice is now a leading cause of preventable hearing loss in African infants (Source: WHO Africa Region, 2022)


What To Do:

  • Schedule hearing tests for any baby who had severe jaundice or transfusion

  • Use OAE or ABR testing at major hospitals or ENT centers

  • In rural areas, CHWs should ask caregivers about hearing milestones at each visit

🔗 Hearing Tool: WHO Ear & Hearing Care Manual –
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240085889


📖 Learning and Developmental Delays

Age Possible Concerns
3–6 months Not smiling, poor head control, not tracking with eyes
6–12 months Cannot sit, crawl, or respond to name
1–2 years Doesn’t speak, doesn’t play or imitate, walks late
2–5 years Trouble understanding or remembering things, poor coordination

🧠 Why It Happens:
Bilirubin affects deep brain areas like the basal ganglia and cerebellum, critical for movement, memory, and learning.


🔎 Monitoring Tools & Resources


💬 African Case – Nigeria

A baby boy in Enugu recovered from severe jaundice at 5 days old. At 9 months, the CHW noticed he did not sit or respond to sounds. Referral confirmed hearing loss and delayed motor skills. With early hearing aids and therapy, he started walking at 20 months and began speech classes at 2 years.


✅ Quiz – Effects of Jaundice

Q1. Which part of a baby’s development can be affected by untreated severe jaundice?
A. Hearing
B. Learning
C. Feeding
D. All of the above

Answer: D
Rationale: Jaundice can damage multiple areas of the brain affecting feeding, hearing, and learning.


Q2. A 2-month-old baby who had severe jaundice is not reacting to loud sounds. What should be done?
A. Wait another month
B. Tell the mother to sing louder
C. Refer for a hearing test
D. Use herbs for ears

Answer: C
Rationale: Babies with jaundice history and hearing concerns need early testing.


Q3. What is a red flag for poor feeding in a baby recovering from jaundice?
A. Baby cries after feeds
B. Baby feeds every 2 hours
C. Baby gags, chokes, or stops sucking
D. Baby likes breastfeeding

Answer: C
Rationale: Poor coordination in feeding is a warning sign of neurological impact.

MamaTotoBot - Maternal & Child Health Assistant