1. Infections diagnosed in children and young people screened for malaria in UK emergency departments: a retrospective multi-centre study.
- Author
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Bird C, Hayward GN, Turner PJ, Wasala D, Merrick V, Lyttle MD, Mullen N, and Fanshawe TR
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Fever, Emergency Service, Hospital, United Kingdom epidemiology, Communicable Diseases, Imported diagnosis, Communicable Diseases, Imported epidemiology, Malaria diagnosis, Malaria epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Data on imported infections in children and young people (CYP) are sparse., Aims: To describe imported infections in CYP arriving from malaria-endemic areas and presenting to UK emergency departments (ED) who were screened for malaria., Methods: This is a retrospective, multi-centre, observational study nested in a diagnostic accuracy study for malaria rapid diagnostic tests. Any CYP < 16 years presenting to a participating ED with a history of fever and travel to a malaria-endemic area between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2017 and who had a malaria screen as a part of standard care were included. Geographical risk was calculated for the most common tropical infections., Results: Of the 1414 CYP screened for malaria, 44.0% ( n = 622) arrived from South Asia and 33.3% ( n = 471) from sub-Saharan Africa. Half (50.0%) had infections common in both tropical and non-tropical settings such as viral upper respiratory tract infection (URTI); 21.0% of infections were coded as tropical if gastro-enteritis is included, with a total of 4.2% (60) cases of malaria. CYP diagnosed with malaria were 7.44 times more likely to have arrived from sub-Saharan Africa than from South Asia (OR 7.44, 3.78-16.41)., Conclusion: A fifth of CYP presenting to participating UK EDs with fever and a history of travel to a malaria-endemic area and who were screened for malaria had a tropical infection if diarrhoea is included. A third of CYP had no diagnosis. CYP arriving from sub-Saharan Africa had the greatest risk of malaria. Abbreviations: CYP: children and young people; ED: emergency department; PERUKI: Paediatric Emergency Research in the UK and Ireland; RDT: rapid diagnostic test; VFR: visiting friends and relatives.
- Published
- 2024
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