| Literature DB >> 26286032 |
Hannah Jary1,2, Jane Mallewa3, Mulinda Nyirenda4, Brian Faragher5, Robert Heyderman6, Ingrid Peterson7, Stephen Gordon8, Kevin Mortimer9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumonia is the 2nd leading cause of years of life lost worldwide and is a common cause of adult admissions to hospital in sub-Saharan Africa. Risk factors for adult pneumonia are well characterised in developed countries, but are less well described in sub-Saharan Africa where HIV is a major contributing factor. Exposure to indoor and outdoor air pollution is high, and tobacco smoking prevalence is increasing in sub-Saharan Africa, yet the contribution of these factors to the burden of chronic respiratory diseases in sub-Saharan Africa remains poorly understood. Furthermore, the extent to which the presence of chronic respiratory diseases and exposure to air pollution contribute to the burden of pneumonia is not known.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26286032 PMCID: PMC4545771 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-015-0090-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for cases and controls
| Criteria for cases | Criteria for controls | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion | Exclusion | Inclusion | Exclusion |
| Age 18 or over | Pre-admission diagnosis of terminal illness (e.g. metastatic malignancy, terminal AIDS) | Age 18 or over | Pre-existing diagnosis of terminal illness (e.g. metastatic malignancy, terminal AIDS) |
| Lives in Blantyre city | Current anti-TB treatment or evidence of current TB infection | Lives in Blantyre city | Current anti-TB treatment or evidence of current TB infection |
| Reported cough or chest pain or breathlessness or haemoptysis | Prior hospitalisation within the last 4 weeks | Hospitalisation for a pneumonia-like illness in the past 4 months or current pneumonia-like illness | |
| Reported fever or recorded fever (≥38 °C) | Prior participation in the study | Prior participation in the study | |
| Crepitations or pleural rub or bronchial breathing or clinical features of pleural effusion | Lives in a residential institution (eg. prison) | Lives in a residential institution (eg. prison) | |
| Radiological changes judged to be new and consistent with pneumonia, without another obvious cause | Death prior to follow up assessment | Death prior to follow up assessment | |
| Requires hospitalisation | Alternative diagnosis explaining their presentation | Utilises private health care facilities if has illness requiring hospitalisation | |
| Symptoms for 14 days or more | |||