The aim of the study is to examine the epidemiology of anaphylaxis in hospitalized children in Lazio (Central Italy) and to evaluate the incidence and case fatality rate. We also verified the concordance of diagnosis between the Emergency Department and Ordinary hospitalizations. In order to obtain these results, we reviewed all ICD-9 codes indicative of anaphylaxis in all primary and secondary diagnoses from 2000 to 2003 in all Emergency Departments, Ordinary Hospitalizations and Day Hospitals in Lazio. We then identified 203 ICD-9 diagnoses of anaphylaxis in children aged between 0 and 17 years. Anaphylactic shock (995.0) accounted for 109 (53.7%) of cases. Food anaphylaxis (995.60 onwards) accounted for 87 (43.0%) of cases. Food anaphylaxis was more frequent in the first years of life. In fact, it decreased from 12.5/100,000 resident children/year in the first year of life to 6.1/100,000 resident children/year in the first two years of life, and less than 3/100,000 resident children/year after the seventh year (p <0.001). Only 12.5% of cases of anaphylaxis diagnosed in Ordinary Hospitalizations were subsequently diagnosed by the Emergency Department as anaphylaxis. Moreover, only 42.3% of the diagnoses of anaphylaxis made in the Emergency Department were later confirmed during ordinary hospitalization. In the four years of study, one child died from anaphylaxis. Thus, mortality was 0.038 cases/100,000 resident children/year. In conclusion, the incidence of hospitalization was highest in the first years of life, during which food anaphylaxis accounted for most hospitalizations. The inconsistency of diagnoses between Emergency Departments and Ordinary Hospitalizations suggests the need to increase awareness of anaphylaxis among health workers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/039463200802100422 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Paediatr Open
September 2024
Azienda USL - IRCCS di Reggio Emilia, Reggio Emilia, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Int J Equity Health
April 2024
Agència de Qualitat I Avaluació Sanitàries de Catalunya (AQuAS), Barcelona, Spain.
Background: Since 2008, children in Catalonia (Spain) have suffered a period of great economic deprivation. This situation has generated broad-ranging health inequalities in a variety of diseases. It is not known how these inequalities have changed over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trop Pediatr
August 2017
Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social México, Unidad de Investigación en Epidemiología Clínica Unidad Médica de Alta Especialidad Hospital de Pediatría Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Ciudad de México, México.
We analyzed clinical and epidemiological characteristics of Burkitt lymphoma (BL) in two defined socioeconomic regions in Mexico: high socioeconomic region (HSER; with two political jurisdictions) and low socioeconomic region (LSER; with three jurisdictions). Of the 63 cases registered in the Childhood Cancer Registry (1996-2013), 45 (71.4%) were from HSER and 18 (28.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To identify the cancer incidence and mortality in Mexican Social Security Institute beneficiary (MSSI-B) children during 1996-2013.
Materials And Methods: Both cancer cases (n=4 728) and deaths (n=2 378) were analyzed in MSSI-B children who were registered in five states of the Mexican Republic. The incidence and mortality trends and the incidences (rate x 1 000 000 children / year) of the type of cancer, age, sex, and place of residence were obtained.
Med Lav
March 2016
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Santa Maria hospital, Lisbon.
Background: Medical Doctors (MD), although at the front line of response to patients and their families, are seldom study subjects for occupational psychosocial risks and work related stress.
Objectives: Assess psychiatry and anaesthesiology residents in a central and university Portuguese Hospital for the presence of psychosocial risks at work.
Methods: We used the Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire version 2 (COPSOQ), which was applied face-to-face in two group settings, in April 2014.
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