PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Quantifying the incidence of severe-febrile-illness hospital admissions in sub-Saharan Africa.

  • Paul Roddy,
  • Ursula Dalrymple,
  • Tomas O Jensen,
  • Sabine Dittrich,
  • V Bhargavi Rao,
  • Daniel A Pfeffer,
  • Katherine A Twohig,
  • Teri Roberts,
  • Oscar Bernal,
  • Ethan Guillen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220371
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0220371

Abstract

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Severe-febrile-illness (SFI) is a common cause of morbidity and mortality across sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). The burden of SFI in SSA is currently unknown and its estimation is fraught with challenges. This is due to a lack of diagnostic capacity for SFI in SSA, and thus a dearth of baseline data on the underlying etiology of SFI cases and scant SFI-specific causative-agent prevalence data. To highlight the public health significance of SFI in SSA, we developed a Bayesian model to quantify the incidence of SFI hospital admissions in SSA. Our estimates indicate a mean population-weighted SFI-inpatient-admission incidence rate of 18.4 (6.8-31.1, 68% CrI) per 1000 people for the year 2014, across all ages within areas of SSA with stable Plasmodium falciparum transmission. We further estimated a total of 16,200,337 (5,993,249-27,321,779, 68% CrI) SFI hospital admissions. This analysis reveals the significant burden of SFI in hospitals in SSA, but also highlights the paucity of pathogen-specific prevalence and incidence data for SFI in SSA. Future improvements in pathogen-specific diagnostics for causative agents of SFI will increase the abundance of SFI-specific prevalence and incidence data, aid future estimations of SFI burden, and enable clinicians to identify SFI-specific pathogens, administer appropriate treatment and management, and facilitate appropriate antibiotic use.