BMJ Open (Aug 2024)
Epidemiological trends of febrile infants presenting to the Paediatric Emergency department, in a tertiary care hospital, Karachi, Pakistan: a retrospective review
Abstract
Background Understanding the epidemiological patterns of febrile infants can offer valuable insights for optimising management strategies and developing quality improvement initiatives, aiming to improve healthcare delivery in high-volume, low-resource emergency departments (EDs).Objectives To characterise the epidemiology of febrile infants presenting to the paediatric ED of a tertiary care hospital.Methods A retrospective chart review of medical records was performed for febrile infants ≤1 year old, at paediatric ED, Indus Hospital and Health Network (IHHN), Karachi, Pakistan (1 January 2020–31 December 2020).Results There were a total of 2311 patients in the study, with a male-to-female ratio of 1.4:1. The mean age of presentation was 4.9±2.7 months. Cough (n=1002, 43.2%) was the most frequent presenting symptom. The most common provisional ED diagnosis in ≤1 month of age was sepsis (n=98, 51%), bronchopneumonia (n=138, 28.6%) in 1.1–3 and 3.1–6 months (n=176, 36.45%); and upper respiratory tract illness (n=206, 47.4%) in 6.1–12 months of age. Age was significantly associated with provisional ED diagnosis and outcomes (p<0.001). Of 175 ED admissions (n=47, 26.8%), patients were discharged with a hospital diagnosis of bronchopneumonia and (n=27, 15.4) of sepsis. The infant mortality rate was 3/1000 live births.Conclusions This study is the first of its kind to explore the epidemiology of febrile infants in Pakistan, highlighting the burden and severity of respiratory illnesses and sepsis. It underscores the challenges of resource-limited settings, failing to meet the need for admission of febrile infants presenting to ED, IHHN. Moreover, it has highlighted the necessity to optimise the existing triage systems to effectively allocate resources and manage high patient volumes in low-resource EDs.