Hospital readmission following acute illness among children 2-23 months old in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia: a secondary analysis of CHAIN cohort.

IF 9.6 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL EClinicalMedicine Pub Date : 2024-06-07 eCollection Date: 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102676
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Abstract

Background: Children in low and middle-income countries remain vulnerable following hospital-discharge. We estimated the incidence and correlates of hospital readmission among young children admitted to nine hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

Methods: This was a secondary analysis of the CHAIN Network prospective cohort enrolled between 20th November 2016 and 31st January 2019. Children aged 2-23 months were eligible for enrolment, if admitted for an acute illness to one of the study hospitals. Exclusions were requiring immediate resuscitation, inability to tolerate oral feeds in their normal state of health, had suspected terminal illness, suspected chromosomal abnormality, trauma, admission for surgery, or their parent/caregiver was unwilling to participate and attend follow-up visits. Data from children discharged alive from the index admission were analysed for hospital readmission within 180-days from discharge. We examined ratios of readmission to post-discharge mortality rates. Using models with death as the competing event, we evaluated demographic, nutritional, clinical, and socioeconomic associations with readmission.

Findings: Of 2874 children (1239 (43%) girls, median (IQR) age 10.8 (6.8-15.6) months), 655 readmission episodes occurred among 506 (18%) children (198 (39%) girls): 391 (14%) with one, and 115 (4%) with multiple readmissions, with a rate of: 41.0 (95% CI 38.0-44.3) readmissions/1000 child-months. Median time to readmission was 42 (IQR 15-93) days. 460/655 (70%) and 195/655 (30%) readmissions occurred at index study hospital and non-study hospitals respectively. One-third (N = 213/655, 33%) of readmissions occurred within 30 days of index discharge. Sites with fewest readmissions had the highest post-discharge mortality. Most readmissions to study hospitals (371/450, 81%) were for the same illness as the index admission. Age, prior hospitalisation, chronic conditions, illness severity, and maternal mental health score, but not sex, nutritional status, or physical access to healthcare, were associated with readmission.

Interpretation: Readmissions may be appropriate and necessary to reduce post-discharge mortality in high mortality settings. Social and financial support, training on recognition of serious illness for caregivers, and improving discharge procedures, continuity of care and facilitation of readmission need to be tested in intervention studies. We propose the ratio of readmission to post-discharge mortality rates as a marker of overall post-discharge access and care.

Funding: The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (OPP1131320).

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撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚 2-23 个月大儿童急性病后再次入院:CHAIN 队列的二次分析。
背景:中低收入国家的儿童在出院后仍然很容易受到伤害。我们估算了撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚九家医院收治的幼儿再次入院的发生率和相关因素:这是对2016年11月20日至2019年1月31日期间注册的CHAIN网络前瞻性队列的二次分析。年龄为 2-23 个月的儿童,如果因急性病入住研究医院之一,则有资格入组。需要立即抢救、在正常健康状况下无法耐受口服喂养、疑似绝症、疑似染色体异常、外伤、入院手术或其父母/监护人不愿参与和参加随访的儿童不在研究范围内。我们对指数入院后出院的患儿数据进行了分析,以了解他们在出院后 180 天内是否再次入院。我们研究了再入院率与出院后死亡率的比率。使用以死亡为竞争事件的模型,我们评估了人口、营养、临床和社会经济与再入院的关联:在 2874 名儿童(1239 名(43%)女孩,中位数(IQR)年龄为 10.8(6.8-15.6)个月)中,有 506 名(18%)儿童(198 名(39%)女孩)发生了 655 次再入院事件:其中 391 人(14%)再次入院一次,115 人(4%)多次入院,再次入院率为 41.0 (95% CI) :重新入院率为 41.0(95% CI 38.0-44.3)/1000 个儿童月。再入院时间中位数为 42 天(IQR 15-93 天)。460/655例(70%)和195/655例(30%)再入院病例分别发生在指标研究医院和非研究医院。三分之一(N = 213/655,33%)的再入院发生在指标出院后 30 天内。再入院次数最少的医院出院后死亡率最高。研究医院中的大多数再入院患者(371/450,81%)都是因为与指标入院时相同的疾病而入院。年龄、之前的住院情况、慢性病、疾病严重程度和孕产妇心理健康评分与再入院有关,而性别、营养状况或实际医疗条件与再入院无关:解释:在死亡率较高的情况下,为降低出院后死亡率,再次入院可能是适当且必要的。需要在干预研究中对社会和经济支持、对护理人员进行重病识别培训、改善出院程序、持续护理和促进再入院进行测试。我们建议将再入院率与出院后死亡率的比率作为出院后总体就医和护理的标志:比尔及梅琳达-盖茨基金会(OPP1131320)。
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来源期刊
EClinicalMedicine
EClinicalMedicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
18.90
自引率
1.30%
发文量
506
审稿时长
22 days
期刊介绍: eClinicalMedicine is a gold open-access clinical journal designed to support frontline health professionals in addressing the complex and rapid health transitions affecting societies globally. The journal aims to assist practitioners in overcoming healthcare challenges across diverse communities, spanning diagnosis, treatment, prevention, and health promotion. Integrating disciplines from various specialties and life stages, it seeks to enhance health systems as fundamental institutions within societies. With a forward-thinking approach, eClinicalMedicine aims to redefine the future of healthcare.
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