Literature DB >> 23584373

Multicenter study of hypoxemia prevalence and quality of oxygen treatment for hospitalized Malawian children.

Eric D McCollum1, Erica Bjornstad, Geoffrey A Preidis, Mina C Hosseinipour, Norman Lufesi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although hypoxemic children have high mortality, little is known about hypoxemia prevalence and oxygen administration in African hospitals. We aimed to determine the hypoxemia prevalence and quality of oxygen treatment by local clinicians for hospitalized Malawian children.
METHODS: The study was conducted in five Malawian hospitals during January-April 2011. We prospectively measured the peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) using pulse oximetry for all children <15 years old and also determined clinical eligibility for oxygen treatment using WHO criteria for children <5 years old. We determined oxygen treatment quality by Malawian clinicians by comparing their use of WHO criteria for patients <5 years old using two standards: hypoxemia (SpO(2) <90%) and the use of WHO criteria by study staff.
RESULTS: Forty of 761 (5.3%) hospitalized children <15 years old had SpO(2) <90%. No hospital used pulse oximetry routinely, and only 9 of 40 (22.5%) patients <15 years old with SpO(2) <90% were treated with oxygen by hospital staff. Study personnel using WHO criteria for children <5 years old achieved a higher sensitivity (40.0%) and lower specificity (82.7%) than Malawian clinicians (sensitivity 25.7%, specificity 94.1%).
CONCLUSION: Although hypoxemia is common, the absence of routine pulse oximetry results in most hospitalized, hypoxemic Malawian children not receiving available oxygen treatment.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23584373      PMCID: PMC4030433          DOI: 10.1093/trstmh/trt017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0035-9203            Impact factor:   2.184


  22 in total

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10.  Inter-observer variation in the assessment of clinical signs in sick Tanzanian children.

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4.  Determining the quality of IMCI pneumonia care in Malawian children.

Authors:  Erica Bjornstad; Geoffrey A Preidis; Norman Lufesi; Dan Olson; Portia Kamthunzi; Mina C Hosseinipour; Eric D McCollum
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5.  The Epidemiology of Hypoxemic Pneumonia among Young Infants in Malawi.

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6.  National hospital readiness for COVID-19 in Lesotho: evidence for oxygen ecosystem strengthening.

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7.  Predicting Hospitalised Paediatric Pneumonia Mortality Risk: An External Validation of RISC and mRISC, and Local Tool Development (RISC-Malawi) from Malawi.

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Authors:  Hamish Graham; Ayobami A Bakare; Adejumoke I Ayede; Oladapo B Oyewole; Amy Gray; David Peel; Barbara McPake; Eleanor Neal; Shamim A Qazi; Rasa Izadnegahdar; Trevor Duke; Adegoke G Falade
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2019-10-24

10.  Estimated Cost-effectiveness of Solar-Powered Oxygen Delivery for Pneumonia in Young Children in Low-Resource Settings.

Authors:  Yiming Huang; Qaasim Mian; Nicholas Conradi; Robert O Opoka; Andrea L Conroy; Sophie Namasopo; Michael T Hawkes
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