Coming Soon: New Building for Children's Specialty Care
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.
Plan Ahead: Road construction July 6–8 and 13–15 will require valet parking closures and temporary detours.
Newborn sepsis is a severe infection in an infant younger than 28 days old. The infection is in your baby’s blood. But it may affect any body system or the whole body.
Newborn sepsis is most often caused by bacteria. But other germs can also cause it. A baby may become infected before birth if your amniotic fluid is infected. During delivery, the newborn may be exposed to germs in the birth canal. Once born, a baby may be exposed to germs in the hospital or at home.
These things put your baby at risk for sepsis:
Sepsis in newborns can be hard to identify. Symptoms depend on what’s causing the infection. They also depend on how severe the infection is and where it is. The newborn may have:
The symptoms of sepsis are similar to some other health conditions. Your baby will need tests to make a sepsis diagnosis and to rule out other illnesses. These tests may include:
Treatment will depend on your baby’s symptoms, age, and general health. It will also depend on how severe the condition is.
Early diagnosis and treatment is the best way to stop sepsis. If your baby’s healthcare provider thinks it may be sepsis, your baby will get antibiotics right away, even before test results are available. Once the provider has the test results, they may change the treatment.
A newborn with sepsis may be very ill. The baby may need to stay in the newborn intensive care unit (NICU). Your baby will be watched very closely. In addition to the antibiotics, they will get fluids, other medicines, oxygen, nutrition, and help with breathing, if needed.
Sepsis is life-threatening for newborns. It can affect any body system. It often affects more than one system at the same time.
Newborn sepsis can’t be completely prevented. But you can lower the risk. Regular prenatal care can find and treat many problems that put a newborn at risk for sepsis. One example of this is that all pregnant women are screened for group B strep infection and treated if they have it.
Hospitals and other facilities have practices in place to prevent the spread of infection. These include:
Call your baby’s healthcare provider right away if your newborn has:
Tips to help you get the most from a visit to your child’s healthcare provider:
Our new Children's Health Specialty Clinics building will bring 30 pediatric specialties together under one roof, making it easier for families to get expert care.