Abstract: | A prospective study of post-delivery temperature changes from birth to 24 h, carried out in a busy District General Hospital is reported. The temperature fall after delivery was less than expected and reflected a high level of awareness of the dangers of hypothermia. On the basis of the findings of the survey, hypothermia in the first 24 h can be defined as a rectal temperature of less than 36.4 degrees C. Those babies who did become hypothermic were significantly more likely to be of low birth weight or preterm gestation. |