From the Department of Emergency Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
Department of Emergency Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 2022 Jan 1;38(1):e378-e384. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000002294.
The epidemiology and presence of pediatric medical emergencies and injury prevention practices in Kenya and resource-limited settings are not well understood. This is a barrier to planning and providing quality emergency care within the local health systems. We performed a prospective, cross-sectional study to describe the epidemiology of case encounters to the pediatric emergency unit (PEU) at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya; and to explore injury prevention measures used in the population.
Patients were enrolled prospectively using systematic sampling over four weeks in the Kenyatta National Hospital PEU. Demographic data, PEU visit data and lifestyle practices associated with pediatric injury prevention were collected directly from patients or guardians and through chart review. Data were analyzed with descriptive statistics with stratification based on pediatric age groups.
Of the 332 patients included, the majority were female (56%) and 76% were under 5 years of age. The most common presenting complaints were cough (40%) fever (34%), and nausea/vomiting (19%). The most common PEU diagnoses were upper respiratory tract infections (27%), gastroenteritis (11%), and pneumonia (8%). The majority of patients (77%) were discharged from the PEU, while 22% were admitted. Regarding injury prevention practices, the majority (68%) of guardians reported their child never used seatbelts or car seats. Of 68 patients that rode bicycles/motorbikes, one reported helmet use. More than half of caregivers cook at potentially dangerous heights; 59% use ground/low level stoves.
Chief complaints and diagnoses in the PEU population were congruent with communicable disease burdens seen globally. Measures for primary injury prevention were reported as rarely used in the sample studied. The epidemiology described by this study provides a framework for improving public health education and provider training in resource-limited settings.
肯尼亚和资源有限的环境中,儿科医疗紧急情况和伤害预防实践的流行病学和存在情况并不为人所知。这是规划和在当地卫生系统内提供优质急救护理的一个障碍。我们进行了一项前瞻性、横断面研究,以描述在内罗毕肯雅塔国家医院儿科急诊室(PEU)就诊的患者的流行病学情况;并探讨该人群中使用的伤害预防措施。
通过在肯雅塔国家医院 PEU 进行四周的系统抽样,前瞻性地对患者进行登记。直接从患者或监护人处以及通过病历回顾收集人口统计学数据、PEU 就诊数据和与儿科伤害预防相关的生活方式做法。根据儿科年龄组进行分层,采用描述性统计方法进行数据分析。
在纳入的 332 名患者中,大多数为女性(56%),76%的患者年龄在 5 岁以下。最常见的就诊症状是咳嗽(40%)、发热(34%)和恶心/呕吐(19%)。最常见的 PEU 诊断是上呼吸道感染(27%)、胃肠炎(11%)和肺炎(8%)。大多数患者(77%)从 PEU 出院,而 22%的患者入院。关于伤害预防做法,大多数(68%)监护人报告其孩子从未使用过安全带或汽车座椅。在 68 名骑自行车/摩托车的患者中,有 1 名报告使用了头盔。超过一半的照顾者在潜在危险的高度做饭;59%的人使用地面/低水平炉灶。
PEU 人群的主要诉求和诊断与全球传染病负担一致。在研究样本中,一级伤害预防措施的报告使用率很低。本研究描述的流行病学情况为改善资源有限环境中的公共卫生教育和提供者培训提供了框架。