ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of hospital admissions for indigenous children with malnutrition in a rural/remote Australian centre. DESIGN: Retrospective review of the medical records. SETTING: Rural secondary hospital. SUBJECTS: Remote and rural indigenous children aged less than four years managed for malnutrition in Alice Springs Hospital (ASH). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The primary outcome measure was weight gain during hospitalisation and posthospitalisation. Secondary outcome measures were yield of investigations, diagnoses made, treatments given, social interventions, readmission rate and nosocomial infection. RESULTS: Median age of the 55 children was 15.1 months. Median weight change was 1.5 g day(-1)prior to hospitalisation, 36.7 g day(-1)during and 9 g day(-1)two months following hospitalisation (P < 0.05). Investigations performed had high yields (80% of children had a treatable organic contributor to malnutrition). Nosocomial infection occurred in 21 (38%) children. Readmission occurred at an average of 1.9 times per child (range 0-5), 34 (37%) occurred within three months and 48 (52%) within six months. CONCLUSION: In rural Indigenous children with malnutrition, hospitalisation was effective in re-establishing growth and defining organic contributors to malnutrition. However, the high readmission rate and nosocomial infection mandates that alternative models to nutritional rehabilitation, in addition to a broad psychosocial and public health approach to prevention and management of malnutrition, is required.