학술논문

Epidemiology of Disease and Mortality From a PICU in Mozambique*
Document Type
article
Source
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine. 19(11)
Subject
Public Health
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Infectious Diseases
Patient Safety
Hematology
Clinical Research
Sepsis
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Health and social care services research
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Cause of Death
Child
Child Mortality
Child
Preschool
Critical Care
Female
HIV Infections
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Infant
Infant
Newborn
Intensive Care Units
Pediatric
Length of Stay
Malaria
Male
Mozambique
Poverty
Retrospective Studies
burns
human immunodeficiency virus
malaria
pediatric
sepsis
trauma
Nursing
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Pediatrics
Clinical sciences
Paediatrics
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesDelivery of pediatric critical care in low-income countries is limited by a lack of infrastructure, resources, and providers. Few studies have analyzed the epidemiology of disease associated with a PICU in a low-income country. The aim of this study was to document the primary diagnoses and the associated mortality rates of patients presenting to a tertiary PICU in Mozambique in order to formulate quality improvement projects through an international academic partnership. We hypothesized that the PICU mortality rate would be high and that sepsis would be a common cause of death.DesignRetrospective, observational study.SettingTertiary academic PICU.PatientsAll admitted PICU patients.InterventionsAll available data collection forms containing demographic and clinical data of patients admitted to the PICU at Hospital Central de Maputo, Mozambique from January 2013 to December 2013 were analyzed retrospectively.Measurements and main resultsThe patient median age was 2 years (57% male). The most common primary diagnoses were malaria (22%), sepsis (18%), respiratory tract infections (12%), and trauma (6%). The mortality rate was 25%. Mortality rates were highest among patients with sepsis (59%), encephalopathy (56%), noninfectious CNS pathologies (33%), neoplastic diseases (33%), meningitis/encephalitis (29%), burns (26%), and cardiovascular pathologies (26%). The median length of PICU stay was 2 days. HIV exposure/infection had a nonstatistically significant association with mortality. Patients admitted for burns had the highest median length of PICU stay (4 d). Most trauma admissions were male (75%), and approximately half of all trauma admissions had an associated head injury (55%).ConclusionsInfectious disease and trauma were highly represented in this Mozambican PICU, and overall mortality was high compared with high-income countries. With this knowledge, targeted collaborative projects in Mozambique can now be created and modified. Further research is needed to monitor the potential benefits of such interventions.