1. Bacteraemia, Malaria, and Case Fatality Among Children Hospitalized With Fever in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
- Author
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Sabrina J. Moyo, Joel Manyahi, Bjørn Blomberg, Marit Gjerde Tellevik, Nahya Salim Masoud, Said Aboud, Karim Manji, Adam P. Roberts, Kurt Hanevik, Kristine Mørch, and Nina Langeland
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,bacteraemia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,wc_240 ,malaria ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,wa_395 ,P. falciparum ,Diagnostic tools ,Tanzania ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibiotic resistance ,Dar es salaam ,Internal medicine ,Case fatality rate ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,antimicrobial resistance ,wb_152 ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Unconsciousness ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,wc_750 ,ws_300 ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Malaria - Abstract
Background: Febrile illness is the commonest cause of hospitalization in children four million genomes/μL) of P. falciparum in plasma. Overall, in-hospital death was 4% (89/2,146), and it was higher in children with bacteraemia (8%, 18/227) than malaria (2%, 4/194, p = 0.007). Risk factors for death were bacteraemia (p = 0.03), unconsciousness at admission (p < 0.001), and admission at a tertiary hospital (p = 0.003). Conclusion: Compared to previous studies in this region, our study showed a reduction in malaria prevalence, a decrease in in-hospital mortality, and an increase in antimicrobial resistance (AMR) including ESBLs and multidrug resistance. An increase of AMR highlights the importance of continued strengthening of diagnostic capability and antimicrobial stewardship programs. We also found malaria and bacteraemia contributed equally in causing febrile illness, but bacteraemia caused higher in-hospital death. The most severe form of clinical malaria was associated with P. falciparum parasitaemia. publishedVersion
- Published
- 2020