Cargando…

Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone

Studies reporting the clinical presentations of COVID-19 in children in sub-Saharan Africa are few, especially from resource-constrained countries. This case series reports the demographic and clinical characteristics and laboratory findings of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in children seen at a distr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Adetola, Hammed Hassan, Ishola, David, Afolabi, Muhammed Olanrewaju, Bangura, Joseph, Sesay, Isaac Gibril, Pearce, Richmonda, Garrick, Isaac, Kamara, Bomposseh, Leigh, Bailah, Greenwood, Brian, Watson-Jones, Deborah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7796841/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33456652
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.37.1.26312
_version_ 1783634764986580992
author Adetola, Hammed Hassan
Ishola, David
Afolabi, Muhammed Olanrewaju
Bangura, Joseph
Sesay, Isaac Gibril
Pearce, Richmonda
Garrick, Isaac
Kamara, Bomposseh
Leigh, Bailah
Greenwood, Brian
Watson-Jones, Deborah
author_facet Adetola, Hammed Hassan
Ishola, David
Afolabi, Muhammed Olanrewaju
Bangura, Joseph
Sesay, Isaac Gibril
Pearce, Richmonda
Garrick, Isaac
Kamara, Bomposseh
Leigh, Bailah
Greenwood, Brian
Watson-Jones, Deborah
author_sort Adetola, Hammed Hassan
collection PubMed
description Studies reporting the clinical presentations of COVID-19 in children in sub-Saharan Africa are few, especially from resource-constrained countries. This case series reports the demographic and clinical characteristics and laboratory findings of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in children seen at a district hospital in Sierra Leone. This is a report of nine COVID-19 paediatric cases managed at a secondary level hospital in Kambia District, Northern Sierra Leone. Each child was detected by contact tracing after an infected adult was identified by the COVID-19 response team. The clinical symptoms at presentation, clinical courses, and treatments instituted and patient outcomes are discussed in the context of the facilities available at a typical West African district hospital. Nine out of 30 individuals with confirmed COVID-19 infection who presented to the hospital from 24 April to 20 September 2020 and who were admitted to the isolation center of the hospital were in the paediatric age group. The mean age (SD) and median (IQR) of the children were 69.0 ± 51.7months and 84.0 (10.5, 108.0) months, respectively; five (55.6%) were males. The children were asymptomatic or only had mild illnesses and none required intranasal oxygen or ventilatory support. In the five symptomatic children, the most common symptoms were fever (40%) and cough (40%). All children had normal haemoglobin, platelet and white blood cell (WBC) count. Four children had a positive malaria test and were treated with a complete course of anti-malaria medications. No child received steroid or had specific anti-COVID-19 treatment. All children stayed in the isolation center for 14 days and were re-tested for COVID-19 two weeks after initial diagnosis. No complications have been reported in any of them since discharge. The proportion of children among COVID-19 infected cases seen in a rural community in Sierra Leone was 30%. Fever was the most common symptom and malaria was confirmed in 40% of the infected children. This has significant implication on the diagnosis of COVID-19 in malaria-endemic settings and on how best to manage children who present with fever during the COVID-19 pandemic.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7796841
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher The African Field Epidemiology Network
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77968412021-01-15 Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone Adetola, Hammed Hassan Ishola, David Afolabi, Muhammed Olanrewaju Bangura, Joseph Sesay, Isaac Gibril Pearce, Richmonda Garrick, Isaac Kamara, Bomposseh Leigh, Bailah Greenwood, Brian Watson-Jones, Deborah Pan Afr Med J Case Series Studies reporting the clinical presentations of COVID-19 in children in sub-Saharan Africa are few, especially from resource-constrained countries. This case series reports the demographic and clinical characteristics and laboratory findings of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in children seen at a district hospital in Sierra Leone. This is a report of nine COVID-19 paediatric cases managed at a secondary level hospital in Kambia District, Northern Sierra Leone. Each child was detected by contact tracing after an infected adult was identified by the COVID-19 response team. The clinical symptoms at presentation, clinical courses, and treatments instituted and patient outcomes are discussed in the context of the facilities available at a typical West African district hospital. Nine out of 30 individuals with confirmed COVID-19 infection who presented to the hospital from 24 April to 20 September 2020 and who were admitted to the isolation center of the hospital were in the paediatric age group. The mean age (SD) and median (IQR) of the children were 69.0 ± 51.7months and 84.0 (10.5, 108.0) months, respectively; five (55.6%) were males. The children were asymptomatic or only had mild illnesses and none required intranasal oxygen or ventilatory support. In the five symptomatic children, the most common symptoms were fever (40%) and cough (40%). All children had normal haemoglobin, platelet and white blood cell (WBC) count. Four children had a positive malaria test and were treated with a complete course of anti-malaria medications. No child received steroid or had specific anti-COVID-19 treatment. All children stayed in the isolation center for 14 days and were re-tested for COVID-19 two weeks after initial diagnosis. No complications have been reported in any of them since discharge. The proportion of children among COVID-19 infected cases seen in a rural community in Sierra Leone was 30%. Fever was the most common symptom and malaria was confirmed in 40% of the infected children. This has significant implication on the diagnosis of COVID-19 in malaria-endemic settings and on how best to manage children who present with fever during the COVID-19 pandemic. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2020-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7796841/ /pubmed/33456652 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.37.1.26312 Text en Copyright: Hammed Hassan Adetola et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/The Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Series
Adetola, Hammed Hassan
Ishola, David
Afolabi, Muhammed Olanrewaju
Bangura, Joseph
Sesay, Isaac Gibril
Pearce, Richmonda
Garrick, Isaac
Kamara, Bomposseh
Leigh, Bailah
Greenwood, Brian
Watson-Jones, Deborah
Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title_full Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title_fullStr Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title_full_unstemmed Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title_short Clinical presentations and management of COVID-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in Kambia, northern Sierra Leone
title_sort clinical presentations and management of covid-19 infected children seen in a district health facility in kambia, northern sierra leone
topic Case Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7796841/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33456652
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.37.1.26312
work_keys_str_mv AT adetolahammedhassan clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT isholadavid clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT afolabimuhammedolanrewaju clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT bangurajoseph clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT sesayisaacgibril clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT pearcerichmonda clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT garrickisaac clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT kamarabomposseh clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT leighbailah clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT greenwoodbrian clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone
AT watsonjonesdeborah clinicalpresentationsandmanagementofcovid19infectedchildrenseeninadistricthealthfacilityinkambianorthernsierraleone