Jurnal Internasional aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
A cohort of pediatric injury patients from a hospital-based trauma registry in Northern Tanzania

Dublin Core

Title

Jurnal Internasional aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
A cohort of pediatric injury patients from a hospital-based trauma registry in Northern Tanzania

Subject

Pediatric injuries Sub-Saharan Africa Trauma registry Global health

Description

Introduction: Pediatric injuries in low- and middle-income countries are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Implementing hospital-based trauma registries can reduce the knowledge gap in both hospital care and patient outcomes and lead to quality improvement initiatives. The goal of this study was to create a pediatric trauma registry to provide insight into the epidemiology, outcomes, and factors associated with poor outcomes in injured children. Methods: This was a prospective observational study in which a pediatric trauma registry was implemented at a large zonal referral hospital in Northern Tanzania. Data included demographics, hospital-based care, and out- comes including morbidity and mortality. Data were input into REDCap©and analyzed using ANOVA and Chi- squared tests in SAS(Version 9.4)©. Results: 365 patients were enrolled in the registry from November 2020 to October 2021. The majority were males (n = 240, 65.8%). Most were children 0–5 years (41.7%, n = 152), 34.5% (n = 126) were 6–11 years, and 23.8% (n = 87) were 12–17 years. The leading causes of pediatric injuries were falls (n = 137, 37.5%) and road traffic injuries (n = 125, 34.5%). The mortality rate was 8.2% ( n = 30 ). Of the in-hospital deaths, 43.3% were children with burn injuries who also had a higher odds of mortality than children with other injuries (OR 8.72, p < 0.001). The factors associated with in-hospital mortality and morbidity were vital sign abnormalities, burn severity, abnormal Glasgow Coma Score, and ICU admission. Conclusion: The mortality rate of injured children in our cohort was high, especially in children with burn injuries. In order to reduce morbidity and mortality, interventions should be prioritized that focus on pediatric injured pa- tients that present with abnormal vital signs, altered mental status, and severe burns. These findings highlight the need for health system capacity building to improve outcomes of pediatric injury patients in Northern Tanzania

Creator

Elizabeth M. Keating , Francis Sakita , Blandina T. Mmbaga , Getrude Nkini , Ismail Amiri , Chermiqua Tsosie , Nora Fino , Melissa H. Watt , Catherine A. Staton

Source

www.elsevier.com/locate/afjem

Publisher

elsevier

Date

18 April 2022

Contributor

Peri Irawan

Format

pdf

Language

english

Type

text

Files

Tags

,Repository, Repository Horizon University Indonesia, Repository Universitas Horizon Indonesia, Horizon.ac.id, Horizon University Indonesia, Universitas Horizon Indonesia, HorizonU, Repo Horizon ,

Citation

Elizabeth M. Keating , Francis Sakita , Blandina T. Mmbaga , Getrude Nkini , Ismail Amiri , Chermiqua Tsosie , Nora Fino , Melissa H. Watt , Catherine A. Staton, “Jurnal Internasional aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
A cohort of pediatric injury patients from a hospital-based trauma registry in Northern Tanzania,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/1993.