Literature DB >> 9830734

Influence of immunopreventable diseases and AIDS on the demand of an infectious diseases department in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil, in the course of thirty years (1965-1994).

S Setúbal1, W Tavares, S A de Oliveira.   

Abstract

Brazil's nosologic profile has been sustaining profound modifications. Some occurred because of massive immunization campaigns and socioeconomic and demographic trends. Some yet were pure nosologic transitions, such as the emergence of AIDS. In this demand study it is described how these changes reflected on the 8,630 admission of an Infectious Diseases Department in Niterói, along a thirty year period. Brazilian rural endemic diseases were infrequent (3.45%). Men predominated (62%) all the time, in all age strata and in nearly all diseases. Children under fifteen predominated until 1983. There was, in the case of tetanus, a striking rise in age strata. Institutional mortality dropped from 31% in 1965 to 10% in 1984, but rose since then to 15% in 1994. However, if AIDS patients had not been computed, mortality would have kept descending till 8% at the end of the study period. The crescent unimportance of immunopreventable diseases paralleled with the growing prominence of AIDS. In less than a decade, AIDS ranked fifth among the most frequent diseases in the whole period of thirty years. As opposed to the immunopreventable diseases, neither meningitides nor pneumonia appear to be in decline. AIDS, by its exponential incidence, by its chronic character, and by the uncountable opportunistic infections it determines, imposes itself as a challenge for the coming years.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9830734     DOI: 10.1590/s0036-46651998000300010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo        ISSN: 0036-4665            Impact factor:   1.846


  1 in total

1.  Influence of vaccine-preventable diseases and HIV infection on demand for an infectious diseases service in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil, over 22 years - Part II (1995-2016).

Authors:  Laura da Cunha Ferreira; Sérgio Setúbal; Luiz Sérgio Keim; Solange Artimos de Oliveira
Journal:  Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo       Date:  2019-12-20       Impact factor: 1.846

  1 in total

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