Howie, SRC; Schellenberg, J; Chimah, O; Ideh, RC; Ebruke, BE; Oluwalana, C; Mackenzie, G; Jallow, M; Njie, M; Donkor, S; +13 more... Dionisio, KL; Goldberg, G; Fornace, K; Bottomley, C; Hill, PC; Grant, CC; Corrah, T; Prentice, AM; Ezzati, M; Greenwood, BM; Smith, PG; Adegbola, RA; Mulholland, K; (2016) Childhood pneumonia and crowding, bed-sharing and nutrition: a case-control study from The Gambia. The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease, 20 (10). pp. 1405-1415. ISSN 1027-3719 DOI: https://doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.15.0993
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Abstract
SETTING: Greater Banjul and Upper River Regions, The Gambia. OBJECTIVE: To investigate tractable social, environmental and nutritional risk factors for childhood pneumonia. DESIGN: A case-control study examining the association of crowding, household air pollution (HAP) and nutritional factors with pneumonia was undertaken in children aged 2-59 months: 458 children with severe pneumonia, defined according to the modified WHO criteria, were compared with 322 children with non-severe pneumonia, and these groups were compared to 801 neighbourhood controls. Controls were matched by age, sex, area and season. RESULTS: Strong evidence was found of an association between bed-sharing with someone with a cough and severe pneumonia (adjusted OR [aOR] 5.1, 95%CI 3.2-8.2, P < 0.001) and non-severe pneumonia (aOR 7.3, 95%CI 4.1-13.1, P < 0.001), with 18% of severe cases estimated to be attributable to this risk factor. Malnutrition and pneumonia had clear evidence of association, which was strongest between severe malnutrition and severe pneumonia (aOR 8.7, 95%CI 4.2-17.8, P < 0.001). No association was found between pneumonia and individual carbon monoxide exposure as a measure of HAP. CONCLUSION: Bed-sharing with someone with a cough is an important risk factor for severe pneumonia, and potentially tractable to intervention, while malnutrition remains an important tractable determinant.
Item Type | Article |
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Faculty and Department |
Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases > Dept of Disease Control Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology & International Health (2023-) MRC Gambia > GM-Nutrition Theme |
Research Centre | Centre for Maternal, Reproductive and Child Health (MARCH) |
PubMed ID | 27725055 |
ISI | 384393500026 |
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Filename: Severe Pneumonia Risk Factor paper IJTLD submission R1.docx
Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
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