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Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations

BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of primary data to understand the overall pattern of disease and injuries as well as related health-service utilization in resource-poor countries in Africa. OBJECTIVE: To generate reliable and robust data describing the pattern of emergency presentations attributable...

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Autores principales: Mocumbi, Ana O., Cebola, Bonifácio, Muloliwa, Artur, Sebastião, Frederico, Sitefane, Samuel J., Manafe, Naisa, Dobe, Igor, Lumbandali, Norberto, Keates, Ashley, Stickland, Nerolie, Chan, Yih-Kai, Stewart, Simon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6619685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31291292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219273
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author Mocumbi, Ana O.
Cebola, Bonifácio
Muloliwa, Artur
Sebastião, Frederico
Sitefane, Samuel J.
Manafe, Naisa
Dobe, Igor
Lumbandali, Norberto
Keates, Ashley
Stickland, Nerolie
Chan, Yih-Kai
Stewart, Simon
author_facet Mocumbi, Ana O.
Cebola, Bonifácio
Muloliwa, Artur
Sebastião, Frederico
Sitefane, Samuel J.
Manafe, Naisa
Dobe, Igor
Lumbandali, Norberto
Keates, Ashley
Stickland, Nerolie
Chan, Yih-Kai
Stewart, Simon
author_sort Mocumbi, Ana O.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of primary data to understand the overall pattern of disease and injuries as well as related health-service utilization in resource-poor countries in Africa. OBJECTIVE: To generate reliable and robust data describing the pattern of emergency presentations attributable to communicable disease (CD), non-communicable disease (NCD) and injuries in three different regions of Mozambique. METHODS: We undertook a pragmatic, prospective, multicentre surveillance study of individuals (all ages) presenting to the emergency departments of three hospitals in Southern (Maputo), Central (Beira) and Northern (Nampula) Mozambique. During 24-hour surveillance in the seasonally distinct months of April and October 2016/2017, we recorded data on 7,809 participants randomly selected from 39,124 emergency presentations to the three participating hospitals. Applying a pragmatic surveillance protocol, data were prospectively collected on the demography, clinical history, medical profile and treatment of study participants. FINDINGS: A total of 4,021 males and 3,788 (48.5%) females comprising 630 infants (8.1%), 2,070 children (26.5%), 1,009 adolescents (12.9%) and, 4,100 adults (52.5%) were studied. CD was the most common presentation (3,914 cases/50.1%) followed by NCD (1,963/25.1%) and injuries (1,932/24.7%). On an adjusted basis, CD was more prevalent in younger individuals (17.9±17.7 versus 26.6±19.2 years;p<0.001), females (51.7% versus 48.7%—OR 1.137, 95%CI 1.036–1.247;p = 0.007), the capital city of Maputo (59.6%) versus the more remote cities of Beira (42.8%—OR 0.532, 95%CI 0.476–0.594) and Nampula (45.8%—OR 0.538, 95%CI 0.480–0.603) and, during April (51.1% versus 49.3% for October—OR 1.142, 95%CI 1.041–1.253;p = 0.005). Conversely, NCD was progressively more prevalent in older individuals, females and in the regional city of Beira, whilst injuries were more prevalent in males (particularly adolescent/young men) and the northern city of Nampula. On a 24-hour basis, presentation patterns were unique to each hospital. INTERPRETATION: Applying highly pragmatic surveillance methods suited to the low-resource setting of Mozambique, these unique data provide critical insights into the differential pattern of CD, NCD and injury. Consequently, they highlight specific health priorities across different regions and seasons in Southern Africa.
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spelling pubmed-66196852019-07-25 Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations Mocumbi, Ana O. Cebola, Bonifácio Muloliwa, Artur Sebastião, Frederico Sitefane, Samuel J. Manafe, Naisa Dobe, Igor Lumbandali, Norberto Keates, Ashley Stickland, Nerolie Chan, Yih-Kai Stewart, Simon PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of primary data to understand the overall pattern of disease and injuries as well as related health-service utilization in resource-poor countries in Africa. OBJECTIVE: To generate reliable and robust data describing the pattern of emergency presentations attributable to communicable disease (CD), non-communicable disease (NCD) and injuries in three different regions of Mozambique. METHODS: We undertook a pragmatic, prospective, multicentre surveillance study of individuals (all ages) presenting to the emergency departments of three hospitals in Southern (Maputo), Central (Beira) and Northern (Nampula) Mozambique. During 24-hour surveillance in the seasonally distinct months of April and October 2016/2017, we recorded data on 7,809 participants randomly selected from 39,124 emergency presentations to the three participating hospitals. Applying a pragmatic surveillance protocol, data were prospectively collected on the demography, clinical history, medical profile and treatment of study participants. FINDINGS: A total of 4,021 males and 3,788 (48.5%) females comprising 630 infants (8.1%), 2,070 children (26.5%), 1,009 adolescents (12.9%) and, 4,100 adults (52.5%) were studied. CD was the most common presentation (3,914 cases/50.1%) followed by NCD (1,963/25.1%) and injuries (1,932/24.7%). On an adjusted basis, CD was more prevalent in younger individuals (17.9±17.7 versus 26.6±19.2 years;p<0.001), females (51.7% versus 48.7%—OR 1.137, 95%CI 1.036–1.247;p = 0.007), the capital city of Maputo (59.6%) versus the more remote cities of Beira (42.8%—OR 0.532, 95%CI 0.476–0.594) and Nampula (45.8%—OR 0.538, 95%CI 0.480–0.603) and, during April (51.1% versus 49.3% for October—OR 1.142, 95%CI 1.041–1.253;p = 0.005). Conversely, NCD was progressively more prevalent in older individuals, females and in the regional city of Beira, whilst injuries were more prevalent in males (particularly adolescent/young men) and the northern city of Nampula. On a 24-hour basis, presentation patterns were unique to each hospital. INTERPRETATION: Applying highly pragmatic surveillance methods suited to the low-resource setting of Mozambique, these unique data provide critical insights into the differential pattern of CD, NCD and injury. Consequently, they highlight specific health priorities across different regions and seasons in Southern Africa. Public Library of Science 2019-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6619685/ /pubmed/31291292 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219273 Text en © 2019 Mocumbi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mocumbi, Ana O.
Cebola, Bonifácio
Muloliwa, Artur
Sebastião, Frederico
Sitefane, Samuel J.
Manafe, Naisa
Dobe, Igor
Lumbandali, Norberto
Keates, Ashley
Stickland, Nerolie
Chan, Yih-Kai
Stewart, Simon
Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title_full Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title_fullStr Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title_full_unstemmed Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title_short Differential patterns of disease and injury in Mozambique: New perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
title_sort differential patterns of disease and injury in mozambique: new perspectives from a pragmatic, multicenter, surveillance study of 7809 emergency presentations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6619685/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31291292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219273
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