OBJECTIVE: To describe in detail the pediatric intensive care experience of influenza A, particularly pandemic H1N1-09, in Australia and New Zealand during the 2009 Southern Hemisphere winter and to compare the pediatric experience with that of adults. METHOD: This was an inception-cohort study of all children who were admitted to intensive care with confirmed influenza A during winter 2009 at all general ICUs and PICUs in Australia and New Zealand. RESULTS: From June 1 through August 31, 2009, 107 children (20.0 per million [95% confidence interval: 16.1-23.8]) with influenza A, including 83 (15.5 per million [95% confidence interval: 12.1-18.9]) with H1N1-09 were admitted to ICUs. Fifty-two percent (39 of 75) of children with H1N1-09 had 1 or more comorbidity, most commonly neurologic (20%). Most (48 of 83 [58%]) presented with pneumonia. Thirteen of 83 (16%) had neurologic presentations. Eighty percent of the children with H1N1-09 required ventilation. Mortality was lower than in adults: 6 of 83 (7%) vs 114 of 668 (17%) (P = .02). The median length of stay for children with H1N1-09 was 5 days. Children with H1N1-09 occupied 773 bed-days (147 per million children) and 5.8% of specialist PICU beds. Presentation with septic shock or after cardiac arrest and the presence of 1 or more comorbidities were risk factors for severe disease. CONCLUSIONS: H1N1-09 caused a substantial burden on pediatric intensive care services in Australia and New Zealand. Compared with adults, children more commonly had nonrespiratory presentations and required ventilation more often but had a lower mortality rate.
OBJECTIVE: To describe in detail the pediatric intensive care experience of influenza A, particularly pandemic H1N1-09, in Australia and New Zealand during the 2009 Southern Hemisphere winter and to compare the pediatric experience with that of adults. METHOD: This was an inception-cohort study of all children who were admitted to intensive care with confirmed influenza A during winter 2009 at all general ICUs and PICUs in Australia and New Zealand. RESULTS: From June 1 through August 31, 2009, 107 children (20.0 per million [95% confidence interval: 16.1-23.8]) with influenza A, including 83 (15.5 per million [95% confidence interval: 12.1-18.9]) with H1N1-09 were admitted to ICUs. Fifty-two percent (39 of 75) of children with H1N1-09 had 1 or more comorbidity, most commonly neurologic (20%). Most (48 of 83 [58%]) presented with pneumonia. Thirteen of 83 (16%) had neurologic presentations. Eighty percent of the children with H1N1-09 required ventilation. Mortality was lower than in adults: 6 of 83 (7%) vs 114 of 668 (17%) (P = .02). The median length of stay for children with H1N1-09 was 5 days. Children with H1N1-09 occupied 773 bed-days (147 per million children) and 5.8% of specialist PICU beds. Presentation with septic shock or after cardiac arrest and the presence of 1 or more comorbidities were risk factors for severe disease. CONCLUSIONS:H1N1-09 caused a substantial burden on pediatric intensive care services in Australia and New Zealand. Compared with adults, children more commonly had nonrespiratory presentations and required ventilation more often but had a lower mortality rate.
Authors: Adrienne G Randolph; Frances Vaughn; Ryan Sullivan; Lewis Rubinson; B Taylor Thompson; Grace Yoon; Elizabeth Smoot; Todd W Rice; Laura L Loftis; Mark Helfaer; Allan Doctor; Matthew Paden; Heidi Flori; Christopher Babbitt; Ana Lia Graciano; Rainer Gedeit; Ronald C Sanders; John S Giuliano; Jerry Zimmerman; Timothy M Uyeki Journal: Pediatrics Date: 2011-11-07 Impact factor: 7.124
Authors: Ramon E Gist; Rohit Pinto; Niranjan Kissoon; Youssef E Ahmed; Pia Daniel; Mitchell Hamele Journal: Front Pediatr Date: 2021-05-14 Impact factor: 3.418
Authors: Mart Lambertus Stein; James W Rudge; Richard Coker; Charlie van der Weijden; Ralf Krumkamp; Piya Hanvoravongchai; Irwin Chavez; Weerasak Putthasri; Bounlay Phommasack; Wiku Adisasmito; Sok Touch; Le Minh Sat; Yu-Chen Hsu; Mirjam Kretzschmar; Aura Timen Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2012-10-12 Impact factor: 3.295
Authors: Stuart R Dalziel; John Md Thompson; Charles G Macias; Ricardo M Fernandes; David W Johnson; Yehezkel Waisman; Nicholas Cheng; Jason Acworth; James M Chamberlain; Martin H Osmond; Amy Plint; Paolo Valerio; Karen Jl Black; Eleanor Fitzpatrick; Amanda S Newton; Nathan Kuppermann; Terry P Klassen Journal: BMJ Date: 2013-08-12