| Literature DB >> 35425592 |
Sally Jiasi Chen1, Patrick Jb Walker1, Kim Mulholland1, Hamish R Graham1.
Abstract
Background: Humanitarian emergencies increase many risk factors for pneumonia, including disruption to food, water and sanitation, and basic health services. This review describes pneumonia morbidity and mortality among children and adolescents affected by humanitarian emergencies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35425592 PMCID: PMC8980764 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.12.10001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram of literature search.
Characteristics of included studies (n = 22) on childhood pneumonia in humanitarian emergencies in low- and middle-income countries from the year 2000–2021
| Study characteristics* | Number (%) | |
|---|---|---|
|
| LIC | 15 (68%) |
| LMIC | 5 (23%) | |
| UMIC | 4 (18%) | |
|
| EMRO | 10 (45%) |
| SEARO | 6 (27%) | |
| AFRO | 6 (27%) | |
| WPRO | 2 (9%) | |
| EURO | 0 (0%) | |
| PAHO | 0 (0%) | |
|
|
| 21 (95%) |
| Afghanistan | 6 (27%) | |
| Thailand | 3 (14%) | |
| Democratic Republic of Congo | 2 (9%) | |
| Philippines | 2 (9%) | |
| Syria | 2 (9%) | |
| Bangladesh | 1 (5%) | |
| Central African Republic | 1 (5%) | |
| Guinea-Bissau | 1 (5%) | |
| Liberia | 1 (5%) | |
| Nepal | 1 (5%) | |
| Somalia | 1 (5%) | |
|
| 1 (5%)† | |
|
| Infant 1-12 mo | 22 (100%) |
| Children 1-4 y | 21 (95%) | |
| Older children 5-9 y | 9 (41%) | |
| Adolescents 10-17 y | 9 (41%) | |
|
| Inpatient | 12 (55%) |
| Outpatient | 4 (20%) | |
| Community | 6 (27%) | |
|
| Armed conflict/war | 14 (64%) |
| Refugees/IDPs | 5 (23%) | |
| Natural disaster | 3 (14%) | |
| -Typhoon | 2 (9%) | |
| -Earthquake | 1 (5%) | |
| -Drought, Famine, Flood | 0 (0%) | |
|
| Pneumonia-focused | 8 (36%) |
| Pneumonia studied among multiple diseases | 14 (64%) | |
|
| Randomised trial | 2 (9%) |
| Other interventional studies | 0 (0%) | |
| Case-control study | 0 (0%) | |
| Cross-sectional study | 13 (59%) | |
| Cohort study | 4 (18%) | |
| Surveillance study | 2 (9%) | |
| Before and after study | 2 (9%) | |
|
| Incidence | 5 (23%) |
| Proportional morbidity | 13 (59%) | |
| Proportional mortality | 4 (18%) | |
| Case fatality rate | 8 (36%) | |
LIC – low-income country, LMIC – lower-middle-income country, UMIC – upper-middle-income country, EMRO – Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office, SEARO – South-East Regional Office, AFRO – African Regional Office; WPRO – Western Pacific Regional Office, EURO – European Office, PAHO – Regional Office for the Americas,UNHCR – United Nations High-Commissioner for Refugees
*Categories are not mutually exclusive.
†Hershey et al (2011) study includes data on UNHCR refugee camps in the following 16 countries: Bangladesh, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Namibia, Nepal, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda and Yemen.
Characteristics of included studies (n = 22) on childhood pneumonia in humanitarian emergencies in low- and middle-income countries from January 2000 to July 2021
| Study | Country (region*) | Study type | Setting (data collection period) | Study population | Pneumonia case definition (as reported) | Outcomes reported | Study quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anwar et al (2017) [19] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (2005-2013). | 13 404 322 new visits of children aged <5 y old to Basic Package Health Services facilities in Afghanistan. National study using HMIS data. | Healthcare worker diagnosis during routine care. Case definition based on Afghanistan IMCI guidelines (pneumonia = cough or difficult breathing, AND fast breathing for age). | Proportional morbidity for pneumonia and other acute conditions. | W |
| Bernasconi et al (2018) [21] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Before and after study | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (2005-2013). | 8646 children aged 2-59 mo old who presented to one of three Basic Health Centres (BHCs) in Afghanistan (599 consultations in baseline survey, 8047 consultations after implementation of ALMANACH). | Healthcare worker diagnosis during routine care. Case definition based on Afghanistan IMCI guidelines. | Proportional morbidity for pneumonia and other acute conditions. Assess HCW care against IMCI standards. | W |
| Birindwa et al (2020) [27] | Democratic Republic of the Congo (AFRO) | Before and after study | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (2010-2015). | 2007 children aged 2-59 mo old admitted to one of two general referral hospitals or two district hospitals with a diagnosis of ALRI and who completed prescribed inpatient treatment. | Doctor diagnosis during routine care. Pneumonia not explicitly defined, but reported as “acute lower respiratory tract infection, ALRI”. | Proportional morbidity for pneumonia and case fatality rate. | W |
| Chang et al (2016) [31] | Philippines (WPRO) | Cross-sectional | Typhoon-affected population. Pre-crisis, crisis, and stabilisation phases. (Sep 2013-Feb 2014). | 857 children aged 0-17 y old admitted to a level 2 hospital in Philippines at the time of Typhoon Haiyan (8 Nov 2013). | Doctor diagnosis during routine care. “Pneumonia” reported but not explicitly defined. | Proportional morbidity for pneumonia and other acute conditions. | W |
| Clarke-Deelder et al (2019) [20] | Democratic Republic of the Congo (AFRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Jun 2015-Mar 2016). | 366 children aged 2 mo – 5 y with IMCI classified severe disease (includes severe febrile disease, severe pneumonia, and severe dehydration) presenting to 266 health centres and 80 hospitals (randomly selected from all government facilities nationally). | Trained clinical data collectors via direct observation of consultations, using WHO IMCI classification 2014 for severe pneumonia (cough OR difficulty breathing AND any general danger sign). | Proportional morbidity for severe pneumonia, severe febrile disease, and diarrhoea with severe dehydration). Assess HCW care against IMCI standards. | W |
| Giri et al (2018) [32] | Nepal (SEARO) | Cross-sectional | Earthquake-affected population. Post-crisis phase (May-Aug 2015). | 1057 children aged <14 y old admitted to the general pediatrics department of a Kathmandu tertiary hospital with non-traumatic or non-surgical illnesses, in a 15-week period following the 7.8 magnitude Nepal earthquake on 25 April 2015. | Doctor diagnosis during routine care. “Pneumonia” reported but not explicitly defined. | Proportional morbidity. | W |
| Hershey et al (2011) [17] | 16 countries† (AFRO, SEARO, EMRO) | Cross-sectional | Refugees living in refugee camps in 16 countries. Mix of acute crisis, post-crisis, protracted complex emergency settings (Jan 200-Feb 2010). | Children aged <5 y attending health facilities in 90 UNHCR refugee camps in 16 countries. Uses UNHCR HMIS data. | Healthcare worker diagnosis during routine care. UNHCR HIS case definition of pneumonia in children 2 mo to 5 y of age: cough or difficulty breathing and breathing faster than 50 breaths/min (2-12 mo of age) or breathing faster than 40 breaths/min (1-5 y of age). | Incidence, proportional morbidity, and proportional mortality, for pneumonia, malaria, and diarrhoea. | W |
| Huerga et al (2009) [30] | Liberia (AFRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population during post-crisis phases (Jan-Jul 2005). | 5137 patients admitted to a referral hospital in Monrovia, Liberia 1 y after the civil war ended (including 1509 children aged 0 to 14 y old hospitalised in the paediatric ward). | Doctor diagnosis during routine care using MSF clinical guidelines. Pneumonia not explicitly defined and reported as “respiratory infection”. | Case fatality rate and proportional mortality. | W |
| Manaseki-Holland et al (2012) [16] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Randomised controlled trial | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Dec 2008-Jun 2009). | 3046 children aged 1-11 mo living in Afghanistan enrolled to community-based RCT. | Clinical data collectors using WHO IMCI clinical definition of pneumonia (cough plus increased respiratory rate for age), severe pneumonia (cough + chest indrawing), very severe pneumonia (cough plus any danger sign - not feeding, convulsions, vomiting, lethargic or unconscious, stridor in a calm child). “Confirmed” pneumonia determined using CXR reported by trained radiologist using WHO interpretation standards. | Incidence, incidence of death from pneumonia. | S |
| Manaseki-Holland et al (2010) [35] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Randomised controlled trial | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Feb-May 2007). | 453 children aged 1-36 mo diagnosed with IMCI-classified pneumonia at a teaching hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan. | Doctor diagnosis using WHO clinical definitions for pneumonia (age-specific tachypnoea WITHOUT wheeze), severe pneumonia (pneumonia PLUS chest indrawing), and very severe pneumonia (pneumonia PLUS any danger signs - central cyanosis, severe respiratory distress, inability to drink, convulsions, vomiting). | Case fatality rate. | S |
| Meiqari et al (2018) [28] | Syria (EMRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Acute and protracted, complex emergency (2013-2016). | Children aged <18 y old using MSF-OCA health facilities in northern Syria (4672 in-patient admissions, and 27 742 out-patient consultations). | Doctor/health care worker diagnosis using MSF clinical guidelines. Pneumonia not explicitly defined, but reported as “acute lower respiratory tract infection, ALRI”. | Proportional morbidity, case fatality rate. | W |
| Ngoy et al (2013) [23] | Somalia (EMRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (2010-2011). | 6211 children aged <15 y admitted to the paediatric ward of Istalin hospital, in Guriel district, Somalia. | Doctor diagnosis using MSF clinical guidelines. Pneumonia not explicitly defined, but reported as “lower respiratory tract infection, LRTI”. | Proportional morbidity, case fatality rate, proportional mortality. | W |
| Rasooly et al (2020) [24] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Jan-Feb 2018). | 752 children aged 2-59 mo admitted to Balkh Regional Hospital with pneumonia or severe pneumonia. | Doctor diagnosis during routine care. Pneumonia and severe pneumonia were reported but not explicitly defined. | Case fatality rate. | N/A‡ |
| Robinson et al (2021) [34] | Central African Republic (AFRO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Mar-Apr 2020). | 591 households (4272 household members) in Ouaka prefecture, Central African Republic who participated in a population-based, two-stage cluster survey. | Verbal reporting by household head. Respiratory infection was reported but not explicitly defined. | Proportional mortality. | W |
| Sodemann et al (2004) [22] | Guinea-Bissau (AFRO) | Cross-sectional and surveillance | Conflict-affected population, acute/subacute crisis (Jun 1997-Jun 1999). | Doctor diagnosis during routine care. Pneumonia was reported but not explicitly defined. | Proportional morbidity, case fatality rate. | W | |
| Summers et al (2018) [14] | Bangladesh (SEARO) | Cross-sectional | Conflict-affected refugees living in refugee camps, including recently displaced and long-stayers (Oct-Nov 2017). | 1827 children aged 6-59 mo old in a Rohingya refugee population living in Kutupalong refugee camp, makeshift settlements, and Nayapara refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. | Caregiver report via household survey. Acute respiratory infection (ARI) was defined as cough with rapid breathing or difficulty breathing and a fever within the 2 weeks preceding the survey. | Incidence. | W |
| Turner, C. et al (2012) [36] | Thailand (SEARO) | Cohort study | Refugees living in refugee camp (Sep 2007-Sep 2010). | A birth cohort of 955 refugee infants recruited from antenatal clinics in Maela refugee camp, Thailand, followed until two years of age. | Clinical data collector during routine visits, and health care worker during illness visits, using WHO case definitions for clinical pneumonia (cough or difficulty breathing and age-specific tachypnoea), severe pneumonia (cough or difficulty breathing plus chest indrawing, very severe pneumonia (severe pneumonia plus cyanosis or inability to suck). CXRs interpreted by 2 clinicians using WHO criteria. | Incidence. | M |
| Turner, C. et al (2013) [15] | Thailand (SEARO) | Cohort study | Refugees living in refugee camp (Sep 2007-Sep 2010). | A birth cohort of 955 refugee infants recruited from antenatal clinics in Maela refugee camp, Thailand, followed until two years of age. | Clinical data collector during routine visits, and health care worker during illness visits, using WHO case definitions for clinical pneumonia (cough or difficulty breathing and age-specific tachypnoea), severe pneumonia (cough or difficulty breathing plus chest indrawing, very severe pneumonia (severe pneumonia plus cyanosis or inability to suck). CXRs interpreted by 2 clinicians using WHO criteria. | Incidence, incidence of death from pneumonia. | M |
| Turner, P. et al (2013) [25] | Thailand (SEARO) | Surveillance study | Refugees living in refugee camps (Apr 2009-Sep 2011). | 698 refugees living in Maela refugee camp, Thailand admitted to a humanitarian organisation hospital with pneumonia. | WHO criteria for clinical pneumonia U5 (cough or difficulty breathing AND age-specific tachypnoea), severe pneumonia (pneumonia with chest indrawing), and very severe pneumonia (pneumonia with one of the following: difficulty feeding, lethargy, convulsions, severe respiratory distress, loss of consciousness, or central cyanosis. British Thoracic Society case definition in children ≥5y for clinical pneumonia (history of fever OR fever ≥38°C PLUS cough OR difficulty breathing PLUS abnormal chest examination). | Proportional morbidity. | M |
| van Berlaer et al (2019) [29] | Philippines (WPRO) | Cross-sectional study | Typhoon-affected population, from 1 week post-event (16-20 Nov 2013). | 1267 patients presenting to a field hospital in the Philippines 1 week after typhoon Haiyan (8 Nov 2013). | Doctor diagnosis during routine care based on clinical features: lower respiratory tract infection, LRTI (“dyspnoea, tachypnoea, signs of lower ARI”). | Proportional morbidity. | W |
| Van Berlaer et al (2017) [18] | Syria (EMRO) | Cross-sectional study | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency 4 y after the start of the Syrian civil war (21-22 May 2015). | 1002 children aged <15 y old in four northern Syrian governorate districts (Aleppo, Idleb, Hamah, and Lattakia). | Clinical data collector during community and facility-based survey. Lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) case description: “dyspnoea, and raised respiratory rate, signs of lower ARI”. | Proportional morbidity. | W |
| Zabihullah et al (2017) [26] | Afghanistan (EMRO) | Cohort study | Conflict-affected population. Protracted, complex emergency (Dec 2012-Mar 2013). | 639 children <5 y of age who met the WHO criteria for clinical pneumonia at the time of admission to the paediatric department of a regional refreral hospital in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan. | Doctor diagnosis on admission using standardised data collection form and WHO criteria for clinical pneumonia (cough or difficulty breathing AND age-specific tachypnoea), severe pneumonia (pneumonia with chest indrawing), and very severe pneumonia (pneumonia with one of the following: difficulty feeding, lethargy, convulsions, severe respiratory distress, loss of consciousness, or central cyanosis. | Case fatality rate, aetiology. | M |
EMRO – Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office, SEARO – South-East Regional Office, AFRO – African Regional Office, WPRO – Western Pacific Regional Office; EURO, European Office, PAHO – Regional Office for the Americas, IMCI – Integrated Management of Childhood Illness, HCW – health care worker, BPHS – Basic Package Health Services, UNHCR – United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, LRTI – lower respiratory tract infection, ARI – acute respiratory infection; CXR – chest x-ray, mo – month, y - year
*WHO Region.
†Hershey et al (2011) [17] study included data on UNHCR refugee camps in the following 16 countries: Bangladesh, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Namibia, Nepal, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand, Uganda and Yemen.
‡N/A, not applicable. Unable to assess quality due to limited data in conference abstract (no related full manuscript was available).
Figure 2Pneumonia incidence (panel A) and proportional morbidity (panel B) among children in humanitarian emergencies in low- and middle-income countries. Panel A. IDP – internally displaced persons; U5 – children under 5 years of age. *Pneumonia incidence rates have been converted to episodes per 1000 person-years to allow comparison between studies. †Pneumonia classified using pre-2014 WHO pneumonia definitions. Incidence rates for sub-classifications of pneumonia were as follows: 50 (non-severe), 15 (severe), 6 (very severe) and 22 (radiological end-point). ‡Pneumonia classified using WHO pneumonia and severe pneumonia categories. Panel B. Pneumonia proportional morbidity among children in humanitarian emergencies in low- and middle-income countries. IDP - internally displaced persons, U5 – children under 5 years of age. *Proportional morbidity – pneumonia cases as a proportion of all paediatric cases in community, presenting to outpatient facilities, or admitted to hospital, unless otherwise specified. †Van Berlaer reported for pneumonia as a primary diagnosis (9.0%), or as any diagnosis (13%). ‡Anwar also reported pneumonia morbidity estimates in three-year intervals: 12.2% (2005-2007), 9.9% (2008-2010), and 8.6% (2011-2013). §Severe pneumonia, % of all paediatric outpatients. ‖Sodemann also reported a pneumonia morbidity estimate of 10.8% in the pre-conflict period. ¶Birindwa also reported pneumonia morbidity rates of 12.2% pre-PCV13 and 7.1% post-PCV13. **Pneumonia, % of paediatric medical admissions during the period of impact of an earthquake. Pneumonia morbidity rates pre-impact and post-impact were reported as 22.0% and 19.4% respectively. ††Pneumonia, % of paediatric medical admissions.
Figure 3Proportional mortality (panel A), case fatality rate (panel B), pneumonia incidence of death (panel C) among children in humanitarian emergencies in low- and middle-income countries. Panel A. IDP – internally displaced persons, U5 – children under 5 years of age. *Case fatality rate – pneumonia deaths as a proportion of pneumonia cases. †Under 15 years of age. ‡1-36 months of age. §Birindwa also reported pneumonia mortality rates of 4.8% pre-PCV13 and 4.9% post-PCV13. Panel B. IDP – internally displaced persons, U5 – children under 5 years of age. *Estimates for incidence of pneumonia-related death have been converted to deaths per 1000 person-years to allow comparison between studies. Panel C. IDP – internally displaced persons, U5 – children under 5 years of age. *Proportional mortality = pneumonia deaths as a proportion of all paediatric deaths in community, or hospital, unless otherwise specified. †Under 15 years of age.