Sedaghat Ahmad R, Wilke Claus O, Cunningham Michael J, Ishman Stacey L
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Otology and Laryngology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Laryngoscope. 2014 Jul;124(7):1700-6. doi: 10.1002/lary.24492. Epub 2013 Dec 11.
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: To identify characteristics and disparities associated with presentation of pediatric acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS) complications.
A cross-sectional study of the 2008 Nationwide Emergency Department Sample database.
A total of 101,660 children 18 years of age or younger diagnosed with ABS, 696 of whom had orbital or intracranial complications, were identified. Patient and hospital-specific characteristics were investigated for association with childhood ABS complications.
Orbital and intracranial complications occurred in 0.7% of children with ABS. Such complications were more common in boys (odds ratio [OR]: 1.65, P<.001) and children with chronic rhinosinusitis (OR: 7.89, P<.001), and were associated with presentation to metropolitan teaching (OR: 2.15, P<.001) and nonteaching (OR: 14.39, P<.001) hospitals. Orbital complications were associated with younger age (OR: 0.96, P<.001), whereas intracranial complications were associated with older age (OR: 1.11, P<.001). A dichotomy in socioeconomic background differentiated children with orbital ABS complications from those with intracranial complications. Although orbital complications were associated with higher income (OR: 2.13, P<.001) and private insurance (OR: 1.36, P=.003), intracranial complications were associated with Medicaid (OR: 2.96, P<.001) or no insurance at all (OR: 3.73, P=.001).
Socioeconomic disparities exist in presentation of ABS complications in children. Although hinted at by the association with urban/metropolitan hospitals, explicit evidence is provided by association of intracranial complications with markers of low socioeconomic status and poor access to healthcare. Efforts to aid early diagnosis and treatment should target providers in metropolitan areas who treat children of lower socioeconomic status. Such interventions will ideally improve outcomes and limit healthcare costs related to the high morbidity of pediatric ABS complications.
2b.
目的/假设:确定与小儿急性细菌性鼻窦炎(ABS)并发症表现相关的特征和差异。
对2008年全国急诊科样本数据库进行横断面研究。
共识别出101660名18岁及以下诊断为ABS的儿童,其中696名有眼眶或颅内并发症。调查患者及医院的特定特征与儿童ABS并发症之间的关联。
ABS患儿中眼眶和颅内并发症的发生率为0.7%。此类并发症在男孩中更常见(优势比[OR]:1.65,P<0.001)以及患有慢性鼻-鼻窦炎的儿童中更常见(OR:7.89,P<0.001),并且与在大都市教学医院(OR:2.15,P<0.001)和非教学医院(OR:14.39,P<0.001)就诊有关。眼眶并发症与年龄较小有关(OR:0.96,P<0.001),而颅内并发症与年龄较大有关(OR:1.11,P<0.001)。社会经济背景的差异区分了患有眼眶ABS并发症的儿童和患有颅内并发症的儿童。虽然眼眶并发症与较高收入(OR:2.13,P<0.001)和私人保险(OR:1.36,P = 0.003)有关,但颅内并发症与医疗补助(OR:2.96,P<0.001)或根本没有保险(OR:3.73,P = 0.001)有关。
儿童ABS并发症的表现存在社会经济差异。虽然与城市/大都市医院的关联有所暗示,但颅内并发症与社会经济地位低下和医疗服务可及性差的标志物之间的关联提供了明确证据。帮助早期诊断和治疗的努力应针对治疗社会经济地位较低儿童的大都市地区的医疗服务提供者。此类干预措施理想情况下将改善治疗结果并限制与小儿ABS并发症高发病率相关的医疗费用。
2b。