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A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19

OBJECTIVES: This work provides an overview of young children's (aged 0-9) infectious diseases epidemiology, by exploring the link between various comorbid conditions, COVID-19, and death rate. METHODS: Public data on hospitalized young children was obtained from national databases of the Mexica...

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Autores principales: Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R., Santoyo-Suarez, Michelle G., Benitez-Chao, Diego Francisco, Galan-Huerta, Kame, Villareal, Hector Franco, Garza-Treviño, Elsa N., Islas, Jose Francisco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10624577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37928801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijregi.2023.10.004
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author Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R.
Santoyo-Suarez, Michelle G.
Benitez-Chao, Diego Francisco
Galan-Huerta, Kame
Villareal, Hector Franco
Garza-Treviño, Elsa N.
Islas, Jose Francisco
author_facet Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R.
Santoyo-Suarez, Michelle G.
Benitez-Chao, Diego Francisco
Galan-Huerta, Kame
Villareal, Hector Franco
Garza-Treviño, Elsa N.
Islas, Jose Francisco
author_sort Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: This work provides an overview of young children's (aged 0-9) infectious diseases epidemiology, by exploring the link between various comorbid conditions, COVID-19, and death rate. METHODS: Public data on hospitalized young children was obtained from national databases of the Mexican health care system from 2020-2022. Data included age, year of entry, gender, the time between admission to death (hospitalization time), date of death, comorbidities, and admissions to the intensive care unit. Children were separated into age groups and frequencies were calculated. Binary regression models were developed to determine the correlation of comorbidities and COVID-19 to death as calculated by odds ratios (OR). RESULTS: From 2020-2022, there were 11,815 hospitalizations among young children, of which 15.98% were due to COVID-19, 2.55% of hospitalizations resulted in fatalities from which 32.45% of deaths were COVID-19 related. The highest case-calculated fatality ratio of COVID-19 infected young children was estimated at 7.04% by early 2020, but dropped to 2.11% by the end of the second semester of 2022. The most frequent comorbidities associated with their hospitalization and death for the general population were intubation (OR: 17.967), pneumonia (OR: 2.263), diabetes (OR: 7.301), cardiovascular diseases (OR: 1.528) and COVID-19 (OR: 261). For the COVID-19-positive group, the most impactful comorbidities were intubation (OR: 20.232), pneumonia (OR: 3.057), and diabetes (OR: 12.824). CONCLUSION: Children's hospitalizations and deaths were common during the pandemic; wherein major comorbidities played an important role. Therefore, effective comorbidity management and vaccination programs are essential to reduce hospitalizations and deaths among young children.
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spelling pubmed-106245772023-11-05 A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19 Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R. Santoyo-Suarez, Michelle G. Benitez-Chao, Diego Francisco Galan-Huerta, Kame Villareal, Hector Franco Garza-Treviño, Elsa N. Islas, Jose Francisco IJID Reg Original Report OBJECTIVES: This work provides an overview of young children's (aged 0-9) infectious diseases epidemiology, by exploring the link between various comorbid conditions, COVID-19, and death rate. METHODS: Public data on hospitalized young children was obtained from national databases of the Mexican health care system from 2020-2022. Data included age, year of entry, gender, the time between admission to death (hospitalization time), date of death, comorbidities, and admissions to the intensive care unit. Children were separated into age groups and frequencies were calculated. Binary regression models were developed to determine the correlation of comorbidities and COVID-19 to death as calculated by odds ratios (OR). RESULTS: From 2020-2022, there were 11,815 hospitalizations among young children, of which 15.98% were due to COVID-19, 2.55% of hospitalizations resulted in fatalities from which 32.45% of deaths were COVID-19 related. The highest case-calculated fatality ratio of COVID-19 infected young children was estimated at 7.04% by early 2020, but dropped to 2.11% by the end of the second semester of 2022. The most frequent comorbidities associated with their hospitalization and death for the general population were intubation (OR: 17.967), pneumonia (OR: 2.263), diabetes (OR: 7.301), cardiovascular diseases (OR: 1.528) and COVID-19 (OR: 261). For the COVID-19-positive group, the most impactful comorbidities were intubation (OR: 20.232), pneumonia (OR: 3.057), and diabetes (OR: 12.824). CONCLUSION: Children's hospitalizations and deaths were common during the pandemic; wherein major comorbidities played an important role. Therefore, effective comorbidity management and vaccination programs are essential to reduce hospitalizations and deaths among young children. Elsevier 2023-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10624577/ /pubmed/37928801 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijregi.2023.10.004 Text en © 2023 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Report
Padilla-Rivas, Gerardo R.
Santoyo-Suarez, Michelle G.
Benitez-Chao, Diego Francisco
Galan-Huerta, Kame
Villareal, Hector Franco
Garza-Treviño, Elsa N.
Islas, Jose Francisco
A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title_full A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title_fullStr A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title_short A panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of Mexico during COVID-19
title_sort panoramic view of hospitalized young children in the metropolitan area of the valley of mexico during covid-19
topic Original Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10624577/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37928801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijregi.2023.10.004
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