| Literature DB >> 30222765 |
David Hendrickx1,2,3, Asha C Bowen1,4,5,6, Julie A Marsh1,2, Jonathan R Carapetis1,5, Roz Walker1,2,3.
Abstract
Infectious diseases contribute a substantial burden of ill-health in Australia's Aboriginal children. Skin infections have been shown to be common in remote Aboriginal communities, particularly in the Northern Territory, Australia. However, primary care data on skin and other infectious diseases among Aboriginal children living in remote areas of Western Australia are limited. We conducted a retrospective review of clinic presentations of all children aged 0 to 5 years presenting to four clinics located in the Western Desert region of Western Australia between 2007 and 2012 to determine this burden at a local level. Infectious diseases accounted for almost 50% of all clinic presentations. Skin infections (sores, scabies and fungal infections) were the largest proportion (16%), with ear infections (15%) and upper respiratory infections (13%) also high. Skin infections remained high in all age groups; 72% of children presented at least once with skin infections. Scabies accounted for only 2% of all presentations, although one-quarter of children presented during the study for management of scabies. Skin sores accounted for 75% of the overall burden of skin infections. Improved public health measures targeting bacterial skin infections are needed to reduce this high burden of skin infections in Western Australia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30222765 PMCID: PMC6141079 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Study participants: Children under 6 years registered at Western Desert community health clinics, January 2007 to December 2012.
| age in years | population estimate | # children registered at the clinics | # children with data for entire year | % of children with at least 1 presentation | person-years | median (IQR) number of presentations | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| all children | presenting children | |||||||
| < 1 | 90 | 136 | 100 | (73.5%) | 87.0% | 117.8 | 13.5 (4.8,22.0) | 17.0 (10.0,23.5) |
| 1 to <2 | 96 | 139 | 104 | (74.8%) | 82.7% | 119 | 13.0 (3.0,21.0) | 16.0 (8.3,22.8) |
| 2 to <3 | 54 | 143 | 98 | (68.5%) | 79.6% | 120.7 | 10.0 (1.3,16.0) | 12.0 (7.0,17.0) |
| 3 to <4 | 156 | 141 | 102 | (72.3%) | 82.4% | 120.7 | 6.0 (2.0,11.8) | 9.0 (4.8,12.0) |
| 4 to <5 | 66 | 145 | 100 | (87.0%) | 85.0% | 123.8 | 6.0 (2.0,12.0) | 7.0 (4.0,13.0) |
| 5 to <6 | 72 | 147 | 95 | (64.6%) | 89.5% | 122.1 | 6.0 (3.0,11.0) | 7.0 (4.0,11.0) |
#, number; %, percentage; IQR, interquartile range
Proportion denominator is # children registered at community clinics included in the study, for children in the specific age group, over the entire study period.
Presentations among all eligible children for whom data is available for entire year (includes children with no presentations).
Presentations among children who have presented at least once for the age group (excludes children with no presentations).
Reasons for presentation of children under 6 years of age at four Western Desert community health clinics, January 2007 to December 2012.
| Reason for presentation | Number (%) of presentations | Number (%) of children presenting | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4088 | (54%) | 225 | (97%) | |
| upper RTI | 966 | (13%) | 173 | (75%) |
| lower RTI | 414 | (6%) | 118 | (51%) |
| skin sores | 935 | (12%) | 167 | (72%) |
| fungal | 148 | (2%) | 60 | (26%) |
| scabies | 137 | (2%) | 60 | (26%) |
| crusted scabies | 6 | (<0.1%) | 4 | (2%) |
| acropustulosis | 11 | (0.1%) | 4 | (2%) |
| ear infections | 1138 | (15%) | 152 | (66%) |
| throat infections | 214 | (3%) | 104 | (45%) |
| other febrile illness | 127 | (2%) | 77 | (33%) |
| APSGN | 8 | (0.1%) | 2 | (1%) |
| acute rheumatic fever | 1 | (<0.1%) | 1 | (<1%) |
| rheumatic heart disease | 1 | (<0.1%) | 1 | (<1%) |
| diarrhoea | 534 | (7%) | 135 | (58%) |
| asthma | 6 | (<0.1%) | 6 | (3%) |
| hospital referrals | 61 | (1%) | 45 | (19%) |
%, percentage; RTI, respiratory tract infection; GAS, group A streptococcus; APSGN, acute post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis.
a More than one reason can be recorded at each presentation
Fig 1Age-specific frequency of clinic presentations for children under 6 years by number of infectious disease diagnoses at presentation.
Median age at first clinic presentation for scabies, skin sores, ear infections, URTIs and LRTIs, January to December 2012.
| Reason for presentation | n | Median age in years at first presentation (IQR) |
|---|---|---|
| Scabies | 137 | 1.11 (0.46,3.08) |
| Skin sores | 935 | 3.23 (1.79,4.82) |
| Ear infections | 1138 | 2.17 (1.19,3.88) |
| LRTI | 966 | 1.68 (0.80,3.23) |
| URTI | 414 | 1.18 (0.58,2.54) |
IQR, interquartile range; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection; URTI, upper respiratory tract infection
Fig 2Rates of disease-specific presentations, by age, for children under 6 years of age at four Western Desert community health clinics, January 2007 to December 2012.
Fig 3Rates of disease-specific presentations, by year, for children under 6 years of age at four Western Desert community health clinics, January 2007 to December 2012.