Epidemiology of pediatric post-discharge mortality in RwandaLink copied to clipboard!
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- Description:
Background:In Sub-Saharan Africa, pediatric post-discharge death is increasingly recognized as an important contributor to mortality. To address morbidity and mortality during this period, it is critical to generate a representative evidence base throughout sub-Saharan Africa to inform resource prioritization, as well as policy and guideline development. To date, no studies have been conducted in Rwanda, limiting the understanding of the epidemiology of post-discharge mortality in this region. This study aims to describe the epidemiology of post-discharge mortality in a group of children admitted for suspected sepsis in Rwanda.
Methods: We prospectively recruited children aged 0-60 months admitted for suspected sepsis at two sites in Rwanda: Ruhengeri Referral Hospital in Musanze, Rwanda (rural) and University Hospital of Kigali in Kigali, Rwanda (urban) from May 2022 - February 2023. Clinical, laboratory and social variables were collected at admission. Following discharge, participants were followed up to 6 months to determine vital status and health-seeking. We analyzed data in two age-specific cohorts, defined a priori: 0-6m and 6-60m. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify risk factors. Age-stratified Kaplan-Meier curves were used to estimate the cumulative hazard of 6-month post-discharge mortality.
Findings:Of 1218 children enrolled, 115 died (11%): 50% in-hospital (n=57) and 50% after discharge (n=58). Post-discharge mortality was higher in 0-6m cohort (n=28/274, 10%) than in those 6-60m (30/850, 4%), and in Kigali (n=37/413, 9%) vs Ruhengeri (n=21/805, 3%). Median time to post-discharge death was ~1 month (38d in 0-6m; 33d in 6-60m). In both cohorts, increased odds of post-discharge death were associated with weight-for-age z-score <-3 (OR=3.16 (1.26-7.93), 0-6m; OR=7.44 (2.93-18.89), 6-60m) while higher maternal education was protective (OR=0.15 (0.03-0.85), 0-6m; OR=0.09 (0.02-0.75), 6-60m). Abnormal coma scale (OR=3.29 (1.47-7.38)), travel time of >2h (OR=4.63 (1.40-15.22)) and being referred for higher level of care (OR=4.09 (1.04-16.12)) were significant in 6-60 months. Younger children were at highest risk of cumulative mortality.
Ethics Declaration: Ethical approval was obtained from the University of Rwanda College of Medicine and Health Sciences (No 411/CMHS IRB/2021); University Teaching Hospital of Kigali (EC/CHUK/005/2022), University of California San Francisco (381688) and the University of British Columbia (H21-02795).-
- Author(s):
- Umuhoza, Christian, Zhang, CherriUniversity of Rwanda, Hooft, AnnekaInstitute for Global Health, BC Children's and Women's Hospitals, Trawin, JessicaUniversity of California, San Francisco, Uwiragiye, EmmanuelInstitute for Global Health, BC Children's and Women's Hospitals, Mfuranziza, Cynthia GracePolyclinique de l'Etoile, Nguyen, VuongRwanda Paediatric Association, Lewis, PeterInstitute for Global Health, BC Children's and Women's Hospitals, Kornblith, Aaron EInstitute for Global Health, BC Children's and Women's Hospitals, Kenya-Mughisha, NathanUniversity of California, San Francisco, and Wiens, Matthew OWALIMUInstitute for Global Health, BC Children's and Women's Hospitals
- Contributor(s):
- Trawin, Jessica and Wiens, Matthew O
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- Source Repository:
- UBC Dataverse
- Series:
- Pediatric Sepsis Data CoLab // Clinical studies // Smart Discharges // Smart Discharges - Manuscripts
- Publisher(s):
- Borealis
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- Access:
- Restricted
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- License:
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
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- URL:
- https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/60DTRF
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- Publication date:
- 2024-04-18
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- Subjects:
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- Keywords:
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- Identifier:
- https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/60DTRF
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Citation
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- APA Citation:
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Umuhoza, C., Zhang, C., Hooft, A., Trawin, J., Uwiragiye, E., Mfuranziza, C. G., Nguyen, V., Lewis, P., Kornblith, A. E., Kenya-Mughisha, N., & Wiens, M. O. (2024). Epidemiology of pediatric post-discharge mortality in Rwanda [Data set]. UBC Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/60DTRFCitation copied to clipboard
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