مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

video

مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

sound

مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Persian Version

مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

View:

68
مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Download:

67
مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Cites:

Information Journal Paper

Title

Trends in Hospitalization of Children with High-Frequency Diseases; A Nine-Year Retrospective Study

Pages

  12339-12348

Abstract

 Background The disease trends help in identifying the importance of the disease. The purpose of this study was to obtain trends of high morbid diseases in children admitted in the pediatric ward of a tertiary care hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan. Materials and Methods: This is an observational cross-sectional study, conducted in the Pediatric Ward of Rehman Medical Institute (RMI), Peshawar, Pakistan, in 2017. Secondary (historical) data was collected from the Pediatric Ward of Rehman Medical Institute. Data were analyzed using SPSS V. 23 and tabulated in excel sheets with percentages and rates to determine the trends. The data was then presented graphically. Results: A total of 26, 810 records were collected from the RMI database to determine the trends of high-frequency diseases in a pediatric ward. Therefore, Acute Gastro-Enteritis (AGE) [12. 8%] had the highest number of cases, followed closely by Lower Respiratory tract Infections (LRTI) [10. 7%] and Neonatal Jaundice (NNJ) [10. 0%]. Asthma [3. 2%] and Hepatitis A [2. 5%] were the least prevalent cases. 14% of the cases were excluded. Pneumonia, NNS, AGE, and sepsis showed an increasing trend while URTI and asthma showed a decreasing trend for nine years. Conclusion Trends of Pneumonia, Neonatal Sepsis, and Sepsis, in general, show a dramatic rise, AGE, LRTIs, and Enteric Fever show a very gradual increase, a general downward trend is observed in Asthma and Upper Respiratory tract Infections (URTIs); while NNJ, Hepatitis A, and Urinary tract Infections (UTIs) show a static trend.

Cites

  • No record.
  • References

    Cite

    APA: Copy

    Nasim, Omer, Fahad, Muhammad Shah, Hayat, Muhammad Khizar, Hussain, Zeinab, KHAN, SALMAN, & Ahmad, Kashif. (2020). Trends in Hospitalization of Children with High-Frequency Diseases; A Nine-Year Retrospective Study. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, 8(11 (83)), 12339-12348. SID. https://sid.ir/paper/705624/en

    Vancouver: Copy

    Nasim Omer, Fahad Muhammad Shah, Hayat Muhammad Khizar, Hussain Zeinab, KHAN SALMAN, Ahmad Kashif. Trends in Hospitalization of Children with High-Frequency Diseases; A Nine-Year Retrospective Study. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS[Internet]. 2020;8(11 (83)):12339-12348. Available from: https://sid.ir/paper/705624/en

    IEEE: Copy

    Omer Nasim, Muhammad Shah Fahad, Muhammad Khizar Hayat, Zeinab Hussain, SALMAN KHAN, and Kashif Ahmad, “Trends in Hospitalization of Children with High-Frequency Diseases; A Nine-Year Retrospective Study,” INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS, vol. 8, no. 11 (83), pp. 12339–12348, 2020, [Online]. Available: https://sid.ir/paper/705624/en

    Related Journal Papers

  • No record.
  • Related Seminar Papers

  • No record.
  • Related Plans

  • No record.
  • Recommended Workshops






    Move to top
    telegram sharing button
    whatsapp sharing button
    linkedin sharing button
    twitter sharing button
    email sharing button
    email sharing button
    email sharing button
    sharethis sharing button