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Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study

INTRODUCTION: There is a substantial burden of respiratory disease in infants in the sub-Saharan Africa region. Many health care providers (HCPs) that initially receive infants with respiratory distress may not be adequately skilled to differentiate between mild, moderate and severe respiratory symp...

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Autores principales: Hakizimana, Boniface, Kalimba, Edgar, Ndatinya, Augustin, Saint, Gemma, van Miert, Clare, Cartledge, Peter Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258882
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author Hakizimana, Boniface
Kalimba, Edgar
Ndatinya, Augustin
Saint, Gemma
van Miert, Clare
Cartledge, Peter Thomas
author_facet Hakizimana, Boniface
Kalimba, Edgar
Ndatinya, Augustin
Saint, Gemma
van Miert, Clare
Cartledge, Peter Thomas
author_sort Hakizimana, Boniface
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: There is a substantial burden of respiratory disease in infants in the sub-Saharan Africa region. Many health care providers (HCPs) that initially receive infants with respiratory distress may not be adequately skilled to differentiate between mild, moderate and severe respiratory symptoms, which may contribute to poor management and outcome. Therefore, respiratory severity scores have the potential to contributing to address this gap. OBJECTIVES: to field-test the use of two existing standardized bronchiolitis severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in a population of Rwandan infants (1–12 months) presenting with respiratory illnesses to urban, tertiary, pediatric hospitals and to assess the severity of respiratory distress in these infants and the treatments used. METHODS: A cross-sectional, validation study, was conducted in four tertiary hospitals in Rwanda. Infants presenting with difficulty in breathing were included. The LIBSS and ReSViNET scores were independently employed by nurses and residents to assess the severity of disease in each infant. RESULTS: 100 infants were recruited with a mean age of seven months. Infants presented with pneumonia (n = 51), bronchiolitis (n = 36) and other infectious respiratory illnesses (n = 13). Thirty-three infants had severe disease and survival was 94% using nurse applied LIBSS. Regarding inter-rater reliability, the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) for LIBSS and ReSViNET between nurses and residents was 0.985 (95% CI: 0.98–0.99) and 0.980 (0.97–0.99). The convergent validity (Pearson’s correlation) between LIBSS and ReSViNET for nurses and residents was R = 0.836 (p<0.001) and R = 0.815 (p<0.001). The area under the Receiver Operator Curve (aROC) for admission to PICU or HDU was 0.956 (CI: 0.92–0.99, p<0.001) and 0.880 (CI: 0.80–0.96, p<0.001) for nurse completed LIBSS and ReSViNET respectively. CONCLUSION: LIBSS and ReSViNET were designed for infants with bronchiolitis in resource-rich settings. Both LIBSS and ReSViNET demonstrated good reliability and validity results, in this cohort of patients presenting to tertiary level hospitals. This early data demonstrate that these two scores have the potential to be used in conjunction with clinical reasoning to identify infants at increased risk of clinical deterioration and allow timely admission, treatment escalation and therefore support resource allocation in Rwanda.
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spelling pubmed-85682002021-11-05 Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study Hakizimana, Boniface Kalimba, Edgar Ndatinya, Augustin Saint, Gemma van Miert, Clare Cartledge, Peter Thomas PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: There is a substantial burden of respiratory disease in infants in the sub-Saharan Africa region. Many health care providers (HCPs) that initially receive infants with respiratory distress may not be adequately skilled to differentiate between mild, moderate and severe respiratory symptoms, which may contribute to poor management and outcome. Therefore, respiratory severity scores have the potential to contributing to address this gap. OBJECTIVES: to field-test the use of two existing standardized bronchiolitis severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in a population of Rwandan infants (1–12 months) presenting with respiratory illnesses to urban, tertiary, pediatric hospitals and to assess the severity of respiratory distress in these infants and the treatments used. METHODS: A cross-sectional, validation study, was conducted in four tertiary hospitals in Rwanda. Infants presenting with difficulty in breathing were included. The LIBSS and ReSViNET scores were independently employed by nurses and residents to assess the severity of disease in each infant. RESULTS: 100 infants were recruited with a mean age of seven months. Infants presented with pneumonia (n = 51), bronchiolitis (n = 36) and other infectious respiratory illnesses (n = 13). Thirty-three infants had severe disease and survival was 94% using nurse applied LIBSS. Regarding inter-rater reliability, the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) for LIBSS and ReSViNET between nurses and residents was 0.985 (95% CI: 0.98–0.99) and 0.980 (0.97–0.99). The convergent validity (Pearson’s correlation) between LIBSS and ReSViNET for nurses and residents was R = 0.836 (p<0.001) and R = 0.815 (p<0.001). The area under the Receiver Operator Curve (aROC) for admission to PICU or HDU was 0.956 (CI: 0.92–0.99, p<0.001) and 0.880 (CI: 0.80–0.96, p<0.001) for nurse completed LIBSS and ReSViNET respectively. CONCLUSION: LIBSS and ReSViNET were designed for infants with bronchiolitis in resource-rich settings. Both LIBSS and ReSViNET demonstrated good reliability and validity results, in this cohort of patients presenting to tertiary level hospitals. This early data demonstrate that these two scores have the potential to be used in conjunction with clinical reasoning to identify infants at increased risk of clinical deterioration and allow timely admission, treatment escalation and therefore support resource allocation in Rwanda. Public Library of Science 2021-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8568200/ /pubmed/34735488 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258882 Text en © 2021 Hakizimana et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Hakizimana, Boniface
Kalimba, Edgar
Ndatinya, Augustin
Saint, Gemma
van Miert, Clare
Cartledge, Peter Thomas
Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title_full Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title_fullStr Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title_full_unstemmed Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title_short Field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (LIBSS and ReSViNET) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in Rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
title_sort field testing two existing, standardized respiratory severity scores (libss and resvinet) in infants presenting with acute respiratory illness to tertiary hospitals in rwanda – a validation and inter-rater reliability study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8568200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34735488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258882
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