From the *Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Centre for Child Health Research; and †School of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2013 Nov;32(11):1169-74. doi: 10.1097/INF.0b013e31829dd34e.
Gastroenteritis is a major cause of pediatric morbidity. We describe temporal, spatial and seasonal trends in age-specific gastroenteritis hospitalizations among Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australian children during 2 decades, providing a baseline to evaluate the impact of a rotavirus vaccine program begun in 2007.
We conducted a population-based, data linkage study of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal births in Western Australia, 1983 to 2006, and analyzed gastroenteritis-coded hospitalizations before age 15 years in the cohort of 596,465 births. Hospitalization rates in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children and between geographical regions were compared between 1983 to 1994 and 1995 to 2006.
Gastroenteritis rates were highest in children 6-11 months of age (Aboriginal: 259.3/1000/annum; non-Aboriginal: 22.7/1000/annum). Rates declined in Aboriginal children between 1983 to 1994 and 1995 to 2006, particularly in those 12-17 months of age (309/1000 to 179/1000). Rates in non-Aboriginal children<5 years increased 10-40%. The disparity for gastroenteritis rates between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children<5 years declined from being 15.4 times higher to 7.6 times higher in those aged 12-17 months and from 8.4 to 4.4 in those aged 2-4 years. Rates were highest in rural and remote regions, and diverging temporal trends were seen in different geographical regions. Seasonality varied between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children and climatic zones.
This is the largest study of gastroenteritis hospitalization trends in children. We found diverging trends of gastroenteritis hospitalization rates in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children. Although rates have declined in Aboriginal children, disparity between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children continues. Our findings highlight the need to consider age, ethnicity, seasonality and climate when evaluating rotavirus vaccine programs.
肠胃炎是造成儿童发病的主要原因。我们描述了在 20 年间,澳大利亚原住民和非原住民儿童肠胃炎住院的时间、空间和季节性趋势,为评估 2007 年开始实施的轮状病毒疫苗计划的效果提供了基线数据。
我们对西澳大利亚的原住民和非原住民出生情况进行了基于人群的数据链接研究,分析了 1983 年至 2006 年期间 596465 名出生队列中 15 岁以下肠胃炎住院的情况。比较了 1983 年至 1994 年和 1995 年至 2006 年期间原住民和非原住民儿童以及不同地理区域的住院率。
6-11 个月大的儿童肠胃炎发病率最高(原住民:259.3/1000/年;非原住民:22.7/1000/年)。1983 年至 1994 年和 1995 年至 2006 年期间,原住民儿童的肠胃炎发病率下降,尤其是 12-17 个月大的儿童(309/1000 降至 179/1000)。5 岁以下非原住民儿童的肠胃炎发病率增加了 10-40%。原住民和非原住民 5 岁以下儿童肠胃炎发病率的差异从 12-17 个月时的 15.4 倍降至 7.6 倍,2-4 岁时从 8.4 倍降至 4.4 倍。农村和偏远地区的发病率最高,不同地理区域的时间趋势也有所不同。原住民和非原住民儿童的季节性有所不同,且与气候带有关。
这是对儿童肠胃炎住院趋势进行的最大规模研究。我们发现原住民和非原住民儿童肠胃炎住院率的趋势存在差异。尽管原住民儿童的发病率有所下降,但原住民和非原住民儿童之间的差距仍在继续。我们的研究结果强调,在评估轮状病毒疫苗计划时,需要考虑年龄、种族、季节性和气候因素。