Infant Morbidity
18
3
4
12
Key Insights
Highlights
Success Rate
100% trial completion (above average)
Clinical Risk Assessment
Based on trial outcomes
Moderate Risk
Score: 40/100
0.0%
0 terminated out of 18 trials
100.0%
+13.5% vs benchmark
11%
2 trials in Phase 3/4
0%
0 of 12 completed with results
Key Signals
Data Visualizations
Phase Distribution
Trial Status
Trial Success Rate
Benchmark: 86.5%
Based on 12 completed trials
Clinical Trials (18)
Biological Impacts of Rising Temperatures on Maternal, Fetal, and Newborn Health: A Cohort Study (BIRTH Cohort)
Influenza & COVID-19 Obstetric and Perinatal Epidemiology Study in India
Mitigating Infectious Morbidity and Growth Deficits in HIV Exposed Uninfected infanTs With Human Milk Oligosaccharides
BCG Revaccination With the Third Dose of Diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis Vaccine and Infant Mortality in Africa
SWISH Trial (Strategies for Weaning Infants on Supportive High Flow)
Increasing Neonatal HIV Test and Treat to Maximize the Long-Term Impact on Infant Health and Novel Infant Antiretroviral Treatment
Emergency Care Action Plans for Infants with Medical Complexity
Assessing the Feasibility, Acceptability and Effects Of HIV Birth Testing In Maternity Settings In Zimbabwe
Impact of Point-of-Care EID for HIV-Exposed Infants
Evaluating the Feasibility of Point of Care Birth Testing in Eswatini
Comparing Morbidity and Mortality Effects of Two Different Strains of BCG
Prebiotics and Microbiota Composition and Functionality in Rural Burkinabe Infants
Adaptation and Evaluation of the PMTCT CSC in Dedza and Ntcheu Districts, Malawi
The Effects of Different Music Genres on Heart Rate Variability in Extremely and Very Low Birth Weight Newborns
Impact of Low Dose Iron-containing Micronutrient Powders on Iron Status and Morbidity of Young Children in Ethiopia
Extended Pilot Project Community Based Production of Complementary Food in Ethiopia
Effectiveness of Nutritional Supplementation in Preventing Malnutrition in Children With Infection in Karamoja, Uganda
Adrenal Responsiveness During the Perioperative Period in Children Undergoing Congenital Cardiac Surgery