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1.
S. Afr. j. child health (Online) ; 12(3): 127-131, 2018. ilus
Artículo en Inglés | AIM | ID: biblio-1270335

RESUMEN

Background. The clinical outcomes of paediatric patients requiring resuscitation depend on physicians with specialised knowledge,equipment and resources owing to their unique anatomy, physiology and pathology. Khayelitsha Hospital (KH) is a government hospital located near Cape Town, South Africa, that sees ~44 000 casualty unit patients per year and regularly functions at more than 130% of the bed occupancy. Many of these patients are children requiring resuscitation.Objectives. We sought to describe characteristics of children under the age of 12 who required resuscitation upon presentation to KH,determine predictors of mortality, and compare paediatric volume to specialist physician presence in the unit.Methods. A retrospective chart review was performed on patients younger than 12 years who were treated in the resuscitation area of KH during the six-month period from 1 November 2014 to 30 April 2015.Results. A total 317 patients were enrolled in the study with a median age of 14 months. The top 5 diagnoses were: pneumonia (n=58/317);neonatal sepsis (n=40/317); seizures (n=37/317); polytrauma (n=32/317); and acute gastroenteritis complicated by septic shock (n=28/317). Overall mortality was 7% (n=21/317) and mortality in children less than 1 month of age was 12% (n=5/42). Premature birth was associated with a mortality odds ratio of 8.44 (p=0.002). More than two-thirds (73%; n=231/317) of paediatric resuscitations occurred when specialist physicians were not physically present in the unit.Conclusion. The study findings indicate that children under one month of age with a history of prematurity are at high risk and may benefit most from paediatric-specific expertise and rapid transfer to a higher level of care


Asunto(s)
Mortalidad del Niño , Demografía , Resucitación , Sudáfrica
2.
Health libr. rev ; 15(1): 17-20, 1998.
Artículo en Inglés | AIM | ID: biblio-1262579

RESUMEN

Although MEDLINE covers many of the significant medical periodical articles published in developed countries; there is still a considerable amount of medical and health documentation from countries outside the major industrialized areas which is not included. This paper outlines various initiatives to address this; and goes on to describe the setting up; on a cooperative basis; of the African Index Medicus; the problems encountered and progress made. 'Even if we should presume that most of the world's valid; important biomedical information originates in the West-and there is evidence (...) to suggest that this is wilful self delusion-what about at least a minority contribution from the rest? The 2participation in international scientific discourse allowed by Western indexing services is simply too little to account for the scientific output of 80 of the world.'1


Asunto(s)
Organización Mundial de la Salud
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