| Literature DB >> 21888810 |
Eric Mogaka Osoro1, Penina Munyua, Philip Muthoka, Solomon Gikundi, M Kariuki Njenga, Samwel Lifumo, Racheal Achilla, Lilian Waiboci, Charles Nzioka, Jared Omolo, Daniel R Feikin, Robert F Breiman, Mark A Katz.
Abstract
To describe the epidemiology and clinical course of patients hospitalized with pandemic (H1N1) 2009 in Kenya, we reviewed medical records of 49 such patients hospitalized during July-November 2009. The median age (7 years) was lower than that in industrialized countries. More patients had HIV than the general Kenyan population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21888810 PMCID: PMC3322052 DOI: 10.3201/eid1709.100992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
FigurePandemic (H1N1) 2009 case-patients hospitalized by week, Kenya, July–November 2009 (n = 88).
Characteristics of hospitalized patients with pandemic (H1N1) 2009, Kenya, July–November 2009*
| Characteristic | No. patients with characteristic/ no. with data available (%) |
|---|---|
| Female sex | 46/88 (52) |
| Age group, y | |
| 0–<2 | 34/88 (39) |
| 2–4 | 9/88 (10) |
| 5–9 | 10/88 (11) |
| 10–18 | 13/88 (15) |
| 19–49 | 19/88 (22) |
| >49 | 3/88 (3) |
| Underlying medical condition† | |
| Asthma | 5/49 (10) |
| HIV | 4/20 (20) |
| Obesity | 4/20 (20) |
| Tuberculosis‡ | 1/25 (4) |
| Valvular heart disease | 1/49 (2) |
| Oseltamivir treatment | 10/42 (24) |
| ICU care | 1/49 (2) |
*ICU, intensive care unit. †Two patients had asthma and were obese. ‡In continuation phase of treatment.