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Societal Burden and Correlates of Acute Gastroenteritis in Families with Preschool Children
- Source :
- Scientific Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- Nature Publishing Group, 2016.
-
Abstract
- Gastrointestinal infection morbidity remains high amongst preschool children in developed countries. We investigated the societal burden (incidence, healthcare utilization, and productivity loss) and correlates of acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in families with preschoolers. Monthly for 25 months, 2000 families reported AGE symptoms and related care, productivity loss, and risk exposures for one preschooler and one parent. Amongst 8768 child-parent pairs enrolled, 7.3% parents and 17.4% children experienced AGE (0.95 episodes/parent-year and 2.25 episodes/child-year). Healthcare utilization was 18.3% (children) and 8.6% (parents), with 1.6% children hospitalized. Work absenteeism was 55.6% (median 1.5 days) and day-care absenteeism was 26.2% (median 1 day). Besides chronic enteropathies, antacid use, non-breastfeeding, and toddling age, risk factors for childhood AGE were having developmental disabilities, parental occupation in healthcare, multiple siblings, single-parent families, and ≤12-month day-care attendance. Risk factors for parental AGE were female gender, having multiple or developmentally-disabled day-care-attending children, antimicrobial use, and poor food-handling practices. Parents of AGE-affected children had a concurrent 4-fold increased AGE risk. We concluded that AGE-causing agents spread widely in families with preschool children, causing high healthcare-seeking behaviours and productivity losses. Modifiable risk factors provide targets for AGE-reducing initiatives. Children may acquire some immunity to AGE after one year of day-care attendance.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Male
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Cross-sectional study
030106 microbiology
Article
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Risk Factors
Surveys and Questionnaires
Health care
Absenteeism
medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Netherlands
Retrospective Studies
Multidisciplinary
business.industry
Incidence (epidemiology)
Attendance
Retrospective cohort study
Child Day Care Centers
Gastroenteritis
Cross-Sectional Studies
Child, Preschool
Female
Antacids
business
Developed country
Delivery of Health Care
Childhood age
Demography
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20452322
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scientific Reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....56d3e8d070786523efb5757c7157489b