Literature DB >> 16951776

Pattern of medical diseases and determinants of prognosis of hospitalization during 2005 Muslim pilgrimage Hajj in a tertiary care hospital. A prospective cohort study.

Nasim A Khan1, Adam M Ishag, Maha S Ahmad, Fifi M El-Sayed, Zakeyah A Bachal, Tahir G Abbas.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To document the pattern of medical diseases necessitating admission in a tertiary care hospital during Muslim pilgrimage (Hajj). To assess the risk factors associated with mortality during hospitalization.
METHODS: The study was conducted at Al Noor Specialist Hospital, a 550-bed tertiary care teaching hospital, in Makkah, KSA. The participants included all Hajj patients admitted in the Department of Medicine in a 5-week period (January 3 to February 6, 2005) during the 2005 (1425 AH) Hajj. Information about demographics; past medical history; pre-Hajj functional status; presence of language barrier and translator availability; diagnosis for admission and complications during hospitalization including mortality was obtained prospectively using a standardized form.
RESULTS: Six hundred and eighty-nine patients, belonging to 49 countries, with mean age of 62 years and male:female ratio of 1.8:1 were admitted. Two hundred-twenty (31.9%) had diabetes mellitus, 256 (37.2%) had hypertension, 219 (31.8%) had cardiac disease, and 103 (14.9%) patients had chronic lung disease. Of the 449 (65.2%) patients assessed, 284 (63.2%) patients had language barrier, and translator was not available for 152 (53.5%) of them. Pre-Hajj functional status assessment of 240 patients showed that 20 (8.3%) required assistance in performing activities of daily living (ADL), and 40 (16.7%) could not walk for half kilometer without difficulty. Common causes of morbidity were: 235 (34.1%) cardiovascular, 137 (19.9%) infectious and 85 (12.3%) neurological diseases. One hundered and fourteen (16.5%) patients died, with the common causes being pneumonia (28 patients), acute coronary syndrome (21), and stroke (20). The risk factors associated with higher mortality were older age (65 +/- 1 versus 61 +/- 0.6 years, p=0.008), prior history of chronic lung disease (crude odds ratio, 1.81, p=0.034), dependence in any ADLs (4.90, p=0.025), inability to ambulate for half kilometer without difficulty (4.17, p=0.017) and non-availability of translator for patients with language barrier (5.51, p<0.0001).
CONCLUSION: Most patients were elderly with high prevalence of chronic medical disorders. Non-infectious diseases accounted for most morbidity and mortality. Pre-Hajj functional assessment should be carried out to identify patients at high risk of mortality. Provision of translator services for patients with language barrier is essential to improve future outcomes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16951776

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Saudi Med J        ISSN: 0379-5284            Impact factor:   1.484


  27 in total

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2.  Care for People with Diabetes during The Moslem Pilgrimage (Haj) An Overview.

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4.  Treatment and prevention of acute respiratory infections among Iranian hajj pilgrims: a 5-year follow up study and review of the literature.

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7.  Cardiovascular disease in Hajj pilgrims.

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8.  Incidence of first ever stroke during Hajj ceremony.

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9.  Incidence and impact of stroke during Hajj. Results of 2015 Hajj stroke registry.

Authors:  Mohammed A Almekhlafi; Maher A Alhazmi; Sarah S Alsulami; Soha A Almorsy
Journal:  Neurosciences (Riyadh)       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 0.906

10.  Diseases pattern among patients attending Holy Mosque (Haram) Medical Centers during Hajj 1434 (2013).

Authors:  Abdulrahman R Bakhsh; Abdulfattah I Sindy; Mostafa J Baljoon; Khalid O Dhafar; Zohair J Gazzaz; Mukhtiar Baig; Basma A Deiab; Fauzea T Al Hothali
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