Childhood pneumonia: clinical aspects associated with hospitalization or death



Document title: Childhood pneumonia: clinical aspects associated with hospitalization or death
Journal: The brazilian journal of infectious diseases
Database: PERIÓDICA
System number: 000290712
ISSN: 1413-8670
Authors: 1


Institutions: 1Universidade Federal da Bahia, Faculdade de Medicina, Salvador, Bahia. Brasil
Year:
Season: Feb
Volumen: 6
Number: 1
Pages: 22-28
Country: Brasil
Language: Inglés
Document type: Artículo
Approach: Caso clínico, analítico
English abstract OBJECTIVE: To determine which available information at an Emergency Room (ER) consultation is associated with hospitalization or death among children with pneumonia. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: The ER of one university and one private hospital. MEASUREMENT: Using stepwise logistic regression we analyzed factors that showed a univariate association. MAIN RESULTS: Of 2,970 cases, the median age was 1.83 years (range 2 days to 14.5 yrs, mean 2.76 + 2.72 yrs); 25.8% were hospitalized and 0.8% died. Age (2-11 mos, OR 0.4 [0.2-0.6]; 12-59 mos, OR 0.2 [0.1-0.4]; ³ 5yrs, OR 0.1 [0.08-0.3]), malnutrition (OR 2.0 [1.4-2.7]), underlying chronic illness (OR 1.4 [1.1-1.8]), tachypnea (OR 1.8 [1.4-2.4]), chest indrawing (OR 1.7 [1.4-2.2]), and somnolence (OR 1.8 [1.4-2.4]) were associated with hospitalization and age (2-11 mos, OR 0.3 [0.08-0.8]; ³ 12 mos, OR 0.06 [0.02-0.2]), malnutrition (OR 3.1 [1.2-7.7]) and underlying chronic illness (OR 4.3 [1.6-11.0]) were associated with death in the multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Several clinical aspects may be used in assessing need for hospitalization (i.e. young age, malnutrition, underlying chronic illness, tachypnea, chest indrawing and somnolence) for children with pneumonia seen at the ER. Individual intrinsic factors such as age, malnutrition and underlying chronic illness were independently associated with death. Pneumonia should be considered a treatable disease and complete recovery can be achieved in the majority of the cases
Disciplines: Medicina
Keyword: Hospitales,
Neumología,
Pediatría,
Pneumonia,
Niños,
Signos clínicos,
Hospitalización,
Mortalidad,
Pacientes ambulatorios
Keyword: Medicine,
Hospitals,
Pediatrics,
Pneumology,
Pneumonia,
Children,
Clinical signs,
Hospitalization,
Mortality,
Outpatients
Full text: Texto completo (Ver HTML)