Objective: To determine predictors of death among children 2-59 months old admitted to hospital with severe pneumonia. Methods: Prospective observational study from April 1994 to May 2000 to investigate serious infections in children less than 5 years old admitted to a tertiary care government hospital in a rural province in central Philippines. The quality of clinical and laboratory work was monitored. The WHO classification for severe pneumonia was used for patient enrolment. Results: There were 1249 children with severe pneumonia and no CNS infection. Thirty children died. Using univariate analysis, the following factors were significantly associated with death: age 2-5 months, dense infiltrates on chest radiography and presence of definite bacterial pathogens in the blood. Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed the following independent predictors of death: age 2-5 months, weight for age z-score less than -2 SD, dense infiltrates on chest radiography and definite pathogens isolated in the blood. When the results of chest radiographs and blood cultures were not included to mimic facilities available at first-level facilities, age 2-5 months and weight for age z-score less than -2 SD remained independent predictors of death. Conclusion: When resources are limited, children with lower chest wall indrawing (severe pneumonia) who are 2-5 months old or moderately to severely malnourished should be referred for immediate higher-level care. © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Lupisan, S. P., Ruutu, P., Erma Abucejo-Ladesma, P., Quiambao, B. P., Gozum, L., Sombrero, L. T., … Williams, G. (2007). Predictors of death from severe pneumonia among children 2-59 months old hospitalized in Bohol, Philippines: Implications for referral criteria at a first-level health facility. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 12(8), 962–971. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2007.01872.x
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