Department of Paediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria.
J Glob Health. 2018 Dec;8(2):020806. doi: 10.7189/jogh.08.020806.
Childhood pneumonia is the single largest infectious cause of death in children under five worldwide. Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) provide health information on care sought for sick children in resource poor settings. Despite not being primarily designed to identify childhood pneumonia, there are concerns that reported episodes of "symptoms of acute respiratory infection" in DHS and MICS are often interpreted by other groups as a "proxy" for childhood pneumonia. Using DHS5 and MICS5 survey tools, this study aimed to assess how accurately caregivers report of "symptoms of acute respiratory infection" reflect pneumonia episodes and antibiotic use in children under five.
Children aged 0 to 59 months presenting with cough and/or difficult breathing were recruited from four study hospitals in Ibadan, Nigeria from August 2015 to March 2017. Children were assessed using World Health Organization (WHO) standard criteria by study physicians to identify whether they had pneumonia. Three hundred and two matched children in each category of 'pneumonia' and "no pneumonia" were followed up at home, either two or eight weeks later, using questions from DHS5 and MICS5 surveys to assess the accuracy of caregiver recall of pneumonia.
The specificity of DHS5 and MICS5 questions for identifying childhood pneumonia were 87.4 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 83.1-91.0) and 86.1 (95% CI = 81.7-89.8) respectively and the sensitivity of questions were 37.1 (95% CI = 31.6-42.8) and 37.1 (95% CI = 31.6-42.8). Correct recall of antibiotic treatment was poor (kappa statistic = 0.064) but improved with the use of medicine pill boards (kappa statistic = 0.235).
DHS5 and MICS5 survey questions are not designed to identify childhood pneumonia and this study confirms that they do not accurately discern episodes of childhood pneumonia from cough/cold in children under five. The proportion of pneumonia episodes appropriately treated with antibiotics cannot be accurately assessed using current DHS and MICS surveys. If these results are used to guide programmatic decisions, it is likely to encourage overuse and inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics for episodes of cough/cold. International agencies who continue to use these household data to monitor the proportion of children with pneumonia who receive antibiotic treatment should be discouraged from doing this as these data are likely to mislead national and global programmes. Medicine pill boards are used in a number of DHS surveys and should be promoted for wider use in national population surveys to improve the accuracy of antibiotic recall.
儿童肺炎是全球五岁以下儿童死亡的最大单一传染病原因。人口与健康调查(DHS)和多指标类集调查(MICS)提供了资源匮乏环境下寻求患病儿童护理的健康信息。尽管这些调查并非主要用于识别儿童肺炎,但人们担心 DHS 和 MICS 中报告的“急性呼吸道感染症状”在其他群体中经常被解释为儿童肺炎的“替代”指标。本研究使用 DHS5 和 MICS5 调查工具,旨在评估照顾者报告的“急性呼吸道感染症状”在多大程度上反映了五岁以下儿童的肺炎发作和抗生素使用情况。
2015 年 8 月至 2017 年 3 月,从尼日利亚伊巴丹的四家研究医院招募了 0 至 59 个月大的咳嗽和/或呼吸困难的儿童。由研究医生使用世界卫生组织(WHO)标准标准对儿童进行评估,以确定他们是否患有肺炎。在肺炎和“无肺炎”两类中各有 302 名匹配的儿童,在随后的两到八周内,使用 DHS5 和 MICS5 调查中的问题进行家庭随访,以评估照顾者对肺炎的回忆准确性。
DHS5 和 MICS5 问题识别儿童肺炎的特异性分别为 87.4%(95%置信区间[CI] = 83.1-91.0)和 86.1%(95%CI = 81.7-89.8),问题的敏感性分别为 37.1%(95%CI = 31.6-42.8)和 37.1%(95%CI = 31.6-42.8)。抗生素治疗的正确回忆效果较差(kappa 统计量= 0.064),但使用药板可改善(kappa 统计量= 0.235)。
DHS5 和 MICS5 调查问题并非专门用于识别儿童肺炎,本研究证实它们无法准确区分五岁以下儿童的肺炎发作和咳嗽/感冒。目前 DHS 和 MICS 调查无法准确评估适当用抗生素治疗的肺炎发作比例。如果这些结果用于指导方案决策,可能会鼓励过度使用和不合理处方咳嗽/感冒的抗生素。继续使用这些家庭数据来监测接受抗生素治疗的肺炎儿童比例的国际机构应避免这样做,因为这些数据可能会误导国家和全球方案。药板在 DHS 的多项调查中使用,应推广用于全国人口调查,以提高抗生素回忆的准确性。