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Childhood mortality during and after acute illness in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia - The CHAIN cohort study

Authors :
Julie Jemutai
Christine Manyasi
Shamsun Nahar Shaima
Johnstone Thitiri
Mohammod Jobayer Chisti
Daniella Brals
Syera Banu
Dilruba Ahmed
Peace Aber
Ali Faisal Saleem
Kirkby D Tickell
Sassy Molyneux
Lubaba Shahrin
Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayeem Bin Shahid
Abdoulaye Hama Diallo
Priya Sukhtankar
Tahmeed Ahmed
Syed Asad Ali
Blaise Siezanga Gnoumou
Issaka Ouedraogo
Benson Singa
Moses Mburu
Syeda Momena Afsana
Molly Timbwa
Dinesh Mondal
Philliness Prisca Harawa
Narshion Ngao
Christine J. McGrath
Md. Iqbal Hossain
Roseline Maimouna Bamouni
Catherine Achieng Otieno
Zaubina Kazi
Christina Lancioni
Caroline Tigoi
Christopher Lwanga
John Mukisa
Shalton M. Mwaringa
Judd L. Walson
Christopher Maronga
Emmie Mbale
MacPherson Mallewa
Ezekiel Mupere
James A. Berkley
Joseph D. Carreon
Robert H. J. Bandsma
Chris Odhiambo Oduol
Gazi Md. Salauddin Mamun
Emmanuel Chimezi
Dorothy I. Mangale
Wieger Voskuijl
Ali Fazal Khan
Jenala Njirammadzi
Moses Ngari
Celine Bourdon
Donna M. Denno
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

ObjectivesMortality during acute illness among children in low- and middle-income settings remain unacceptably high and there is increasing recognition of the importance of post-discharge mortality. A comprehensive understanding of pathways underlying mortality among acutely ill children is needed to develop interventions and improve guidelines. We aimed to determine the incidence, timing and contributions of proximal and underlying exposures for mortality among acutely ill young children from admission to hospital until 6 months after discharge in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia in the context of guideline-based care.DesignA prospective stratified cohort study recruiting acutely ill children at admission to hospital with follow up until 180 days after discharge from hospital (November 2016-July 2019).SettingNine urban and rural hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia across a range of facility levels, and local prevalences of HIV and malaria.ParticipantsInclusion criteria were age 2-23 months, admission to hospital with acute, non-traumatic medical illness and stratified into three groups by anthropometry. Children were excluded if currently receiving pulmonary resuscitation, had a known condition requiring surgery within 6 months or known terminal illness with death expected within 6 months.Main outcome measuresAcute mortality occurring within 30-days from admission; post-discharge mortality within 180-days from discharge; characteristics with direct and indirect associations with mortality within a multi-level a priori framework including demographic, clinical, anthropometric characteristics at admission and discharge from hospital, and pre-existing child-, caregiver- and household-level characteristics.ResultsOf 3101 participants (median age 11 months), 1218 were severely wasted/kwashiorkor, 763 moderately wasted and 1120 were not wasted. Of 350 deaths, 182 (52%) occurred during index admission, 234 (67%) within 30-days of admission and 168 (48%) within 180-days post-discharge. Ninety (54%) post-discharge deaths occurred at home. The ratio of inpatient to post-discharge mortality was consistent across anthropometric strata and sites. Large high and low risk groups could be disaggregated for both early and post-discharge mortality. Structural equation models identified direct pathways to mortality and multiple socioeconomic, clinical and nutritional domains acting indirectly through anthropometric status.ConclusionsAmong diverse sites in Africa and South Asia, almost half of mortality occurs post-discharge. Despite being highly predictable, these deaths are not addressed in current guidelines. A fundamental shift to a risk-based approach to inpatient and post-discharge management is needed to further reduce childhood mortality and clinical trials of these approaches with outcomes of mortality, readmission and cost are warranted.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03208725

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........69dcb3acc18f1061fe36bd94fcc90e82