Last data update: Apr 18, 2025. (Total: 49119 publications since 2009)
Records 1-14 (of 14 Records) |
Query Trace: Pindyck T[original query] |
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The role of funded partnerships in working towards decreasing COVID-19 vaccination disparities, United States, March 2021-December 2022
Fiebelkorn AP , Adelsberg S , Anthony R , Ashenafi S , Asif AF , Azzarelli M , Bailey T , Boddie TT , Boyer AP , Bungum NW , Burstin H , Burton JL , Casey DM , Chaumont Menendez C , Courtot B , Cronin K , Dowdell C , Downey LH , Fields M , Fitzsimmons T , Frank A , Gustafson E , Gutierrez-Nkomo M , Harris BL , Hill J , Holmes K , Huerta Migus L , Jacob Kuttothara J , Johns N , Johnson J , Kelsey A , Kingangi L , Landrum CM , Lee JT , Martinez PD , Medina Martínez G , Nicholls R , Nilson JR , Ohiaeri N , Pegram L , Perkins C , Piasecki AM , Pindyck T , Price S , Rodgers MS , Roney H , Schultz EM , Sobczyk E , Thierry JM , Toledo C , Weiss NE , Wiatr-Rodriguez A , Williams L , Yang C , Yao A , Zajac J . Vaccine 2024 During the COVID-19 vaccination rollout from March 2021- December 2022, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funded 110 primary and 1051 subrecipient partners at the national, state, local, and community-based level to improve COVID-19 vaccination access, confidence, demand, delivery, and equity in the United States. The partners implemented evidence-based strategies among racial and ethnic minority populations, rural populations, older adults, people with disabilities, people with chronic illness, people experiencing homelessness, and other groups disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. CDC also expanded existing partnerships with healthcare professional societies and other core public health partners, as well as developed innovative partnerships with organizations new to vaccination, including museums and libraries. Partners brought COVID-19 vaccine education into farm fields, local fairs, churches, community centers, barber and beauty shops, and, when possible, partnered with local healthcare providers to administer COVID-19 vaccines. Inclusive, hyper-localized outreach through partnerships with community-based organizations, faith-based organizations, vaccination providers, and local health departments was critical to increasing COVID-19 vaccine access and building a broad network of trusted messengers that promoted vaccine confidence. Data from monthly and quarterly REDCap reports and monthly partner calls showed that through these partnerships, more than 295,000 community-level spokespersons were trained as trusted messengers and more than 2.1 million COVID-19 vaccinations were administered at new or existing vaccination sites. More than 535,035 healthcare personnel were reached through outreach strategies. Quality improvement interventions were implemented in healthcare systems, long-term care settings, and community health centers resulting in changes to the clinical workflow to incorporate COVID-19 vaccine assessments, recommendations, and administration or referrals into routine office visits. Funded partners' activities improved COVID-19 vaccine access and addressed community concerns among racial and ethnic minority groups, as well as among people with barriers to vaccination due to chronic illness or disability, older age, lower income, or other factors. |
Typhoid fever in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: A systematic review, 1990-2021
Appiah GD , Le P , Prentice-Mott G , Bias M , Pratt C , Matar GM , Pindyck T , Fayad AA , Kim S , Mintz ED . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2022 108 (2) 285-292 The occurrence and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) of typhoid fever in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR) are poorly characterized. Robust surveillance data are needed to inform strategies for typhoid control and prevention in the region. We conducted a systematic review of typhoid fever occurrence, complications, and AMR patterns in EMR countries. We identified 70 studies published from 1990 to 2021, including a total of 44,541 cases with blood culture confirmed typhoid fever in 12 EMR countries, with 48 (69%) studies and 42,008 cases from Pakistan. Among 56 studies with AMR data, fluroquinolone (68% of 13,013 tested isolates), and multidrug resistance (40% of 15,765 tested isolates) were common. Forty (57%) of the 56 studies were from Pakistan, and all reports of extensively drug resistant Salmonella Typhi (48% of 9,578 tested isolates) were from studies in Pakistan. Our findings support the need for continued efforts to strengthen surveillance and laboratory capacity for blood-culture detection of typhoid fever in the region, including data from an ongoing collaboration among CDC, the American University of Beirut, and the WHO EMR office. |
Deaths in Children and Adolescents Associated With COVID-19 and MIS-C in the United States.
McCormick DW , Richardson LC , Young PR , Viens LJ , Gould CV , Kimball A , Pindyck T , Rosenblum HG , Siegel DA , Vu QM , Komatsu K , Venkat H , Openshaw JJ , Kawasaki B , Siniscalchi AJ , Gumke M , Leapley A , Tobin-D'Angelo M , Kauerauf J , Reid H , White K , Ahmed FS , Richardson G , Hand J , Kirkey K , Larson L , Byers P , Garcia A , Ojo M , Zamcheck A , Lash MK , Lee EH , Reilly KH , Wilson E , de Fijter S , Naqvi OH , Harduar-Morano L , Burch AK , Lewis A , Kolsin J , Pont SJ , Barbeau B , Bixler D , Reagan-Steiner S , Koumans EH . Pediatrics 2021 148 (5) OBJECTIVES: To describe the demographics, clinical characteristics, and hospital course among persons <21 years of age with a severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-associated death. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective case series of suspected SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths in the United States in persons <21 years of age during February 12 to July 31, 2020. All states and territories were invited to participate. We abstracted demographic and clinical data, including laboratory and treatment details, from medical records. RESULTS: We included 112 SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths from 25 participating jurisdictions. The median age was 17 years (IQR 8.5-19 years). Most decedents were male (71, 63%), 31 (28%) were Black (non-Hispanic) persons, and 52 (46%) were Hispanic persons. Ninety-six decedents (86%) had at least 1 underlying condition; obesity (42%), asthma (29%), and developmental disorders (22%) were most commonly documented. Among 69 hospitalized decedents, common complications included mechanical ventilation (75%) and acute respiratory failure (82%). The sixteen (14%) decedents who met multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) criteria were similar in age, sex, and race and/or ethnicity to decedents without MIS-C; 11 of 16 (69%) had at least 1 underlying condition. CONCLUSIONS: SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths among persons <21 years of age occurred predominantly among Black (non-Hispanic) and Hispanic persons, male patients, and older adolescents. The most commonly reported underlying conditions were obesity, asthma, and developmental disorders. Decedents with coronavirus disease 2019 were more likely than those with MIS-C to have underlying medical conditions. |
SARS-CoV-2-Associated Deaths Among Persons Aged <21 Years - United States, February 12-July 31, 2020.
Bixler D , Miller AD , Mattison CP , Taylor B , Komatsu K , Peterson Pompa X , Moon S , Karmarkar E , Liu CY , Openshaw JJ , Plotzker RE , Rosen HE , Alden N , Kawasaki B , Siniscalchi A , Leapley A , Drenzek C , Tobin-D'Angelo M , Kauerauf J , Reid H , Hawkins E , White K , Ahmed F , Hand J , Richardson G , Sokol T , Eckel S , Collins J , Holzbauer S , Kollmann L , Larson L , Schiffman E , Kittle TS , Hertin K , Kraushaar V , Raman D , LeGarde V , Kinsinger L , Peek-Bullock M , Lifshitz J , Ojo M , Arciuolo RJ , Davidson A , Huynh M , Lash MK , Latash J , Lee EH , Li L , McGibbon E , McIntosh-Beckles N , Pouchet R , Ramachandran JS , Reilly KH , Dufort E , Pulver W , Zamcheck A , Wilson E , de Fijter S , Naqvi O , Nalluswami K , Waller K , Bell LJ , Burch AK , Radcliffe R , Fiscus MD , Lewis A , Kolsin J , Pont S , Salinas A , Sanders K , Barbeau B , Althomsons S , Atti S , Brown JS , Chang A , Clarke KR , Datta SD , Iskander J , Leitgeb B , Pindyck T , Priyamvada L , Reagan-Steiner S , Scott NA , Viens LJ , Zhong J , Koumans EH . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020 69 (37) 1324-1329 Since February 12, 2020, approximately 6.5 million cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection, the cause of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and 190,000 SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths have been reported in the United States (1,2). Symptoms associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection are milder in children compared with adults (3). Persons aged <21 years constitute 26% of the U.S. population (4), and this report describes characteristics of U.S. persons in that population who died in association with SARS-CoV-2 infection, as reported by public health jurisdictions. Among 121 SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths reported to CDC among persons aged <21 years in the United States during February 12-July 31, 2020, 63% occurred in males, 10% of decedents were aged <1 year, 20% were aged 1-9 years, 70% were aged 10-20 years, 45% were Hispanic persons, 29% were non-Hispanic Black (Black) persons, and 4% were non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native (AI/AN) persons. Among these 121 decedents, 91 (75%) had an underlying medical condition,* 79 (65%) died after admission to a hospital, and 39 (32%) died at home or in the emergency department (ED).(†) These data show that nearly three quarters of SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths among infants, children, adolescents, and young adults have occurred in persons aged 10-20 years, with a disproportionate percentage among young adults aged 18-20 years and among Hispanics, Blacks, AI/ANs, and persons with underlying medical conditions. Careful monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 infections, deaths, and other severe outcomes among persons aged <21 years remains particularly important as schools reopen in the United States. Ongoing evaluation of effectiveness of prevention and control strategies will also be important to inform public health guidance for schools and parents and other caregivers. |
Cost of pediatric hospitalizations in Burkina Faso: A cross-sectional study of children aged <5years enrolled through an acute gastroenteritis surveillance program
Aliabadi N , Bonkoungou IJO , Pindyck T , Nikièma M , Leshem E , Seini E , Kam M , Konaté S , Ouattara M , Ouédraogo B , Gue E , Nezien D , Ouedraogo I , Parashar U , Medah I , Mwenda JM , Tate JE . Vaccine 2020 38 (42) 6517-6523 INTRODUCTION: Diarrheal illness is a leading cause of hospitalizations among children <5 years. We estimated the costs of inpatient care for rotavirus and all-cause acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in two Burkina Faso hospitals. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study among children <5 years from December 2017 to June 2018 in one urban and one rural pediatric hospital. Costs were ascertained through caregiver interview and chart abstraction. Direct medical, non-medical, and indirect costs per child incurred are reported. Costs were stratified by rotavirus results. RESULTS: 211 children <5 years were included. AGE hospitalizations cost 161USD (IQR 117-239); 180USD (IQR 121-242) at the urban and 154USD (IQR 116-235) at the rural site. Direct medical costs were higher in the urban compared to the rural site (140USD (IQR 102-182) vs. 90USD (IQR 71-108), respectively). Direct non-medical costs were higher at the rural versus urban site (15USD (IQR 10, 15) vs. 11USD (IQR 5-20), respectively). Indirect costs were higher at the rural versus urban site (35USD (IQR 8-91) vs. 0USD (IQR 0-26), respectively). Rotavirus hospitalizations incurred less direct medical costs as compared to non-rotavirus hospitalizations at the rural site (79USD (IQR 64-103) vs. 95USD (IQR 80-118)). No other differences by rotavirus testing status were observed. The total median cost of a hospitalization incurred by households was 24USD (IQR 12-49) compared to 75USD for government (IQR 59-97). Direct medical costs for households were higher in the urban site (median 49USD (IQR 31-81) versus rural (median 14USD (IQR 8-25)). Households in the lowest wealth quintiles at the urban site expended 149% of their monthly income on the child's hospitalization, compared to 96% at the rural site. CONCLUSIONS: AGE hospitalization costs differed between the urban and rural hospitals and were most burdensome to the lowest income households. Rotavirus positivity was not associated with greater household costs. |
COVID-19 Among American Indian and Alaska Native Persons - 23 States, January 31-July 3, 2020.
Hatcher SM , Agnew-Brune C , Anderson M , Zambrano LD , Rose CE , Jim MA , Baugher A , Liu GS , Patel SV , Evans ME , Pindyck T , Dubray CL , Rainey JJ , Chen J , Sadowski C , Winglee K , Penman-Aguilar A , Dixit A , Claw E , Parshall C , Provost E , Ayala A , Gonzalez G , Ritchey J , Davis J , Warren-Mears V , Joshi S , Weiser T , Echo-Hawk A , Dominguez A , Poel A , Duke C , Ransby I , Apostolou A , McCollum J . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020 69 (34) 1166-1169 Although non-Hispanic American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) persons account for 0.7% of the U.S. population,* a recent analysis reported that 1.3% of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases reported to CDC with known race and ethnicity were among AI/AN persons (1). To assess the impact of COVID-19 among the AI/AN population, reports of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases during January 22(†)-July 3, 2020 were analyzed. The analysis was limited to 23 states(§) with >70% complete race/ethnicity information and five or more laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases among both AI/AN persons (alone or in combination with other races and ethnicities) and non-Hispanic white (white) persons. Among 424,899 COVID-19 cases reported by these states, 340,059 (80%) had complete race/ethnicity information; among these 340,059 cases, 9,072 (2.7%) occurred among AI/AN persons, and 138,960 (40.9%) among white persons. Among 340,059 cases with complete patient race/ethnicity data, the cumulative incidence among AI/AN persons in these 23 states was 594 per 100,000 AI/AN population (95% confidence interval [CI] = 203-1,740), compared with 169 per 100,000 white population (95% CI = 137-209) (rate ratio [RR] = 3.5; 95% CI = 1.2-10.1). AI/AN persons with COVID-19 were younger (median age = 40 years; interquartile range [IQR] = 26-56 years) than were white persons (median age = 51 years; IQR = 32-67 years). More complete case report data and timely, culturally responsive, and evidence-based public health efforts that leverage the strengths of AI/AN communities are needed to decrease COVID-19 transmission and improve patient outcomes. |
Serious Adverse Health Events, Including Death, Associated with Ingesting Alcohol-Based Hand Sanitizers Containing Methanol - Arizona and New Mexico, May-June 2020.
Yip L , Bixler D , Brooks DE , Clarke KR , Datta SD , Dudley S Jr , Komatsu KK , Lind JN , Mayette A , Melgar M , Pindyck T , Schmit KM , Seifert SA , Shirazi FM , Smolinske SC , Warrick BJ , Chang A . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020 69 (32) 1070-1073 Alcohol-based hand sanitizer is a liquid, gel, or foam that contains ethanol or isopropanol used to disinfect hands. Hand hygiene is an important component of the U.S. response to the emergence of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). If soap and water are not readily available, CDC recommends the use of alcohol-based hand sanitizer products that contain at least 60% ethyl alcohol (ethanol) or 70% isopropyl alcohol (isopropanol) in community settings (1); in health care settings, CDC recommendations specify that alcohol-based hand sanitizer products should contain 60%-95% alcohol (≥60% ethanol or ≥70% isopropanol) (2). According to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which regulates alcohol-based hand sanitizers as an over-the-counter drug, methanol (methyl alcohol) is not an acceptable ingredient. Cases of ethanol toxicity following ingestion of alcohol-based hand sanitizer products have been reported in persons with alcohol use disorder (3,4). On June 30, 2020, CDC received notification from public health partners in Arizona and New Mexico of cases of methanol poisoning associated with ingestion of alcohol-based hand sanitizers. The case reports followed an FDA consumer alert issued on June 19, 2020, warning about specific hand sanitizers that contain methanol. Whereas early clinical effects of methanol and ethanol poisoning are similar (e.g., headache, blurred vision, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, loss of coordination, and decreased level of consciousness), persons with methanol poisoning might develop severe anion-gap metabolic acidosis, seizures, and blindness. If left untreated methanol poisoning can be fatal (5). Survivors of methanol poisoning might have permanent visual impairment, including complete vision loss; data suggest that vision loss results from the direct toxic effect of formate, a toxic anion metabolite of methanol, on the optic nerve (6). CDC and state partners established a case definition of alcohol-based hand sanitizer-associated methanol poisoning and reviewed 62 poison center call records from May 1 through June 30, 2020, to characterize reported cases. Medical records were reviewed to abstract details missing from poison center call records. During this period, 15 adult patients met the case definition, including persons who were American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN). All had ingested an alcohol-based hand sanitizer and were subsequently admitted to a hospital. Four patients died and three were discharged with vision impairment. Persons should never ingest alcohol-based hand sanitizer, avoid use of specific imported products found to contain methanol, and continue to monitor FDA guidance (7). Clinicians should maintain a high index of suspicion for methanol poisoning when evaluating adult or pediatric patients with reported swallowing of an alcohol-based hand sanitizer product or with symptoms, signs, and laboratory findings (e.g., elevated anion-gap metabolic acidosis) compatible with methanol poisoning. Treatment of methanol poisoning includes supportive care, correction of acidosis, administration of an alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor (e.g., fomepizole), and frequently, hemodialysis. |
Characteristics of Persons Who Died with COVID-19 - United States, February 12-May 18, 2020.
Wortham JM , Lee JT , Althomsons S , Latash J , Davidson A , Guerra K , Murray K , McGibbon E , Pichardo C , Toro B , Li L , Paladini M , Eddy ML , Reilly KH , McHugh L , Thomas D , Tsai S , Ojo M , Rolland S , Bhat M , Hutchinson K , Sabel J , Eckel S , Collins J , Donovan C , Cope A , Kawasaki B , McLafferty S , Alden N , Herlihy R , Barbeau B , Dunn AC , Clark C , Pontones P , McLafferty ML , Sidelinger DE , Krueger A , Kollmann L , Larson L , Holzbauer S , Lynfield R , Westergaard R , Crawford R , Zhao L , Bressler JM , Read JS , Dunn J , Lewis A , Richardson G , Hand J , Sokol T , Adkins SH , Leitgeb B , Pindyck T , Eure T , Wong K , Datta D , Appiah GD , Brown J , Traxler R , Koumans EH , Reagan-Steiner S . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2020 69 (28) 923-929 During January 1, 2020-May 18, 2020, approximately 1.3 million cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and 83,000 COVID-19-associated deaths were reported in the United States (1). Understanding the demographic and clinical characteristics of decedents could inform medical and public health interventions focused on preventing COVID-19-associated mortality. This report describes decedents with laboratory-confirmed infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, using data from 1) the standardized CDC case-report form (case-based surveillance) (https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/php/reporting-pui.html) and 2) supplementary data (supplemental surveillance), such as underlying medical conditions and location of death, obtained through collaboration between CDC and 16 public health jurisdictions (15 states and New York City). |
Clinical and virologic characteristics of the first 12 patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the United States.
Kujawski SA , Wong KK , Collins JP , Epstein L , Killerby ME , Midgley CM , Abedi GR , Ahmed NS , Almendares O , Alvarez FN , Anderson KN , Balter S , Barry V , Bartlett K , Beer K , Ben-Aderet MA , Benowitz I , Biggs HM , Binder AM , Black SR , Bonin B , Bozio CH , Brown CM , Bruce H , Bryant-Genevier J , Budd A , Buell D , Bystritsky R , Cates J , Charles EM , Chatham-Stephens K , Chea N , Chiou H , Christiansen D , Chu V , Cody S , Cohen M , Conners EE , Curns AT , Dasari V , Dawson P , DeSalvo T , Diaz G , Donahue M , Donovan S , Duca LM , Erickson K , Esona MD , Evans S , Falk J , Feldstein LR , Fenstersheib M , Fischer M , Fisher R , Foo C , Fricchione MJ , Friedman O , Fry A , Galang RR , Garcia MM , Gerber SI , Gerrard G , Ghinai I , Gounder P , Grein J , Grigg C , Gunzenhauser JD , Gutkin GI , Haddix M , Hall AJ , Han GS , Harcourt J , Harriman K , Haupt T , Haynes AK , Holshue M , Hoover C , Hunter JC , Jacobs MW , Jarashow C , Joshi K , Kamali T , Kamili S , Kim L , Kim M , King J , Kirking HL , Kita-Yarbro A , Klos R , Kobayashi M , Kocharian A , Komatsu KK , Koppaka R , Layden JE , Li Y , Lindquist S , Lindstrom S , Link-Gelles R , Lively J , Livingston M , Lo K , Lo J , Lu X , Lynch B , Madoff L , Malapati L , Marks G , Marlow M , Mathisen GE , McClung N , McGovern O , McPherson TD , Mehta M , Meier A , Mello L , Moon SS , Morgan M , Moro RN , Murray J , Murthy R , Novosad S , Oliver SE , O’Shea J , Pacilli M , Paden CR , Pallansch MA , Patel M , Patel S , Pedraza I , Pillai SK , Pindyck T , Pray I , Queen K , Quick N , Reese H , Reporter R , Rha B , Rhodes H , Robinson S , Robinson P , Rolfes MA , Routh JA , Rubin R , Rudman SL , Sakthivel SK , Scott S , Shepherd C , Shetty V , Smith EA , Smith S , Stierman B , Stoecker W , Sunenshine R , Sy-Santos R , Tamin A , Tao Y , Terashita D , Thornburg NJ , Tong S , Traub E , Tural A , Uehara A , Uyeki TM , Vahey G , Verani JR , Villarino E , Wallace M , Wang L , Watson JT , Westercamp M , Whitaker B , Wilkerson S , Woodruff RC , Wortham JM , Wu T , Xie A , Yousaf A , Zahn M , Zhang J . Nat Med 2020 26 (6) 861-868 Data on the detailed clinical progression of COVID-19 in conjunction with epidemiological and virological characteristics are limited. In this case series, we describe the first 12 US patients confirmed to have COVID-19 from 20 January to 5 February 2020, including 4 patients described previously(1-3). Respiratory, stool, serum and urine specimens were submitted for SARS-CoV-2 real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) testing, viral culture and whole genome sequencing. Median age was 53 years (range: 21-68); 8 patients were male. Common symptoms at illness onset were cough (n = 8) and fever (n = 7). Patients had mild to moderately severe illness; seven were hospitalized and demonstrated clinical or laboratory signs of worsening during the second week of illness. No patients required mechanical ventilation and all recovered. All had SARS-CoV-2 RNA detected in respiratory specimens, typically for 2-3 weeks after illness onset. Lowest real-time PCR with reverse transcription cycle threshold values in the upper respiratory tract were often detected in the first week and SARS-CoV-2 was cultured from early respiratory specimens. These data provide insight into the natural history of SARS-CoV-2. Although infectiousness is unclear, highest viral RNA levels were identified in the first week of illness. Clinicians should anticipate that some patients may worsen in the second week of illness. |
The burden of norovirus in the United States, as estimated based on administrative data: Updates for medically attended illness and mortality, 2001 - 2015
Burke RM , Mattison C , Pindyck T , Dahl RM , Rudd J , Bi D , Curns AT , Parashar U , Hall AJ . Clin Infect Dis 2020 73 (1) e1-e8 BACKGROUND: Up-to-date estimates of the burden of norovirus, a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in the United States, are needed to assess the potential value of norovirus vaccines in development. We aimed to estimate the rates, annual counts, and healthcare charges of norovirus-associated ambulatory clinic encounters, Emergency Department (ED) visits, hospitalizations, and deaths in the United States. METHODS: We analyzed administrative data on AGE outcomes from July 1, 2001 through June 30, 2015. Data were sourced from IBM(R) MarketScan(R) Commercial and Medicare Supplemental Databases (ambulatory clinic and ED visits), the Healthcare Utilization Project National Inpatient Sample (NIS; hospitalizations), and the National Center for Health Statistics multiple-cause-of-mortality (MCM) data (deaths). Outcome data (ambulatory clinic and ED visits, hospitalizations, or deaths) were summarized by month, age group, and setting. Healthcare charges were estimated based on insurance claims. Monthly counts of cause-unspecified gastroenteritis-associated outcomes were modeled as functions of cause-specified outcomes, and model residuals were analyzed to estimate norovirus-associated outcomes. Healthcare charges were estimated by applying average charges per cause-unspecified gastroenteritis encounter to the estimated number of norovirus encounters. RESULTS: We estimate 900 deaths (95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 650 - 1100), 110,000 hospitalizations (95%CI: 80,000 - 145,000), 470,000 ED visits (95% CI: 348,000 - 610,000), and 2.3 million ambulatory clinic encounters (95% CI: 1.7 - 2.9 million) annually due to norovirus, with an associated $430 - 740 million in healthcare charges. CONCLUSIONS: Norovirus causes a substantial health burden in the United States each year, and an effective vaccine could have important public health impact. |
Validation of acute gastroenteritis-related International Classification of Diseases, Clinical Modification Codes in pediatric and adult US populations
Pindyck T , Hall AJ , Tate JE , Cardemil CV , Kambhampati AK , Wikswo ME , Payne DC , Grytdal S , Boom JA , Englund JA , Klein EJ , Halasa N , Selvarangan R , Staat MA , Weinberg GA , Beenhouwer DO , Brown ST , Holodniy M , Lucero-Obusan C , Marconi VC , Rodriguez-Barradas MC , Parashar U . Clin Infect Dis 2019 70 (11) 2423-2427 International Classification of Diseases diagnostic codes are used to estimate acute gastroenteritis (AGE) disease burden. We validated AGE-related codes in pediatric and adult populations using 2 multiregional active surveillance platforms. The sensitivity of AGE codes was similar (54% and 58%) in both populations and increased with addition of vomiting-specific codes. |
Risk factors associated with increased mortality from intussusception in African infants
Pindyck T , Parashar U , Mwenda JM , Tadesse A , Armah G , Omore R , Ngwira B , Jani B , Mpabalwani EM , Mbuwayesango B , Tate J . J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2019 70 (1) 20-24 OBJECTIVES: Morbidity and mortality from intussusception, the leading cause of bowel obstruction in infants, is higher in Africa than in other regions of the world, but the reasons have not been well examined. We sought to identify risk and protective factors associated with death or intestinal resection following intussusception. METHODS: Infants with intussusception from 7 sub-Saharan African countries (Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe) were enrolled through active, hospital-based surveillance from February 2012 to December 2016. We examined demographic, clinical, and socioeconomic factors associated with death or intestinal resection following intussusception, using multivariable logistic regression. RESULTS: A total of 1017 infants <1 year of age with intussusception were enrolled. Overall, 13% of children (133/1017) died during the hospitalization, and 48% (467/966) required intestinal resection. In multivariable analyses, female sex (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.2-3.3), longer duration of symptoms prior to presentation (OR 1.1; 95% CI 1.0-1.2), and undergoing intestinal resection (OR 3.4; 95% CI 1.9-6.1) were associated with death after intussusception. Diagnosis by ultrasound or enema (OR 0.4; 95% CI 0.3-0.7), and employment of a household member (OR 0.7; 95% CI 0.4-1.0) were protective against intestinal resection. CONCLUSION: Delays in hospital presentation and female sex were significantly associated with death, whereas higher socioeconomic status and availability of radiologic diagnosis reduced likelihood of undergoing resection. Efforts should be intensified to improve the awareness, diagnosis, and management of intussusception in sub-Saharan African countries to reduce morbidity and mortality from intussusception in these resource limited settings. |
Timeliness of rotavirus vaccination at sentinel sites in four early-adopter African countries
Pindyck T , Tate JE , Bonkoungou IJO , Armah G , Mujuru HA , Rugambwa C , Mwenda JM , Parashar U . Vaccine 2019 37 (40) 6002-6007 BACKGROUND: The majority of countries with the highest rotavirus-associated death rates are in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended routine vaccination against rotavirus worldwide, with unique age recommendations to administer the first dose before 15weeks of age and last dose by 32weeks of age. These age restrictions were relaxed in January 2013, but they may still lead to lower rotavirus vaccine coverage. METHODS: Children age-eligible to have received rotavirus vaccine that were enrolled in Ghana, Zimbabwe, Rwanda or Burkina Faso's active rotavirus surveillance platforms from 2013 to 2017 and had a stool specimen that tested rotavirus-negative were included in the analysis. Proportion vaccinated and timeliness of rotavirus vaccine versus DTPw-HepB-Hib (pentavalent) first dose and last dose were compared at weeks 15 and 32, respectively, using Chi-square analyses. Odds ratios were calculated using logistic regression. RESULTS: Among children who received rotavirus vaccine dose 1, 96-99% received this dose by 15weeks of age and among children who received the last dose, 98-99% received it by 32weeks of age. In all four countries, there was no significant difference in the proportion of children who received first dose rotavirus versus pentavalent vaccine by week 15, or last dose rotavirus versus concordant pentavalent vaccine by week 32. Delayed administration of first dose pentavalent vaccine was significantly associated with missing first dose of rotavirus vaccine in 3 of the 4 countries studied, although delays in administration were rare (1-4%). CONCLUSIONS: Rotavirus vaccination was timely among sentinel sites in these four early rotavirus vaccine-introducing countries in Africa. Late presentation for vaccination may have resulted in some children with access to care missing first dose of rotavirus vaccine; however, vaccination delays were infrequent and therefore the potential impact of the age restrictions on overall proportion vaccinated was minimal. |
A decade of experience with rotavirus vaccination in the United States - vaccine uptake, effectiveness, and impact
Pindyck T , Tate JE , Parashar UD . Expert Rev Vaccines 2018 17 (7) 593-606 INTRODUCTION: Prior to 2006, nearly every U.S child was infected with rotavirus by 5 years of age, and rotavirus was the leading cause of severe childhood gastroenteritis. In February 2006 and June 2008, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended a live attenuated pentavalent rotavirus vaccine (RV5) and a monovalent rotavirus vaccine (RV1), respectively, for routine vaccination of infants in the U.S. Areas covered: We reviewed U.S. data on coverage, vaccine effectiveness (VE), and vaccine impact from 2006-2017. National rotavirus vaccine coverage estimates increased since vaccine introduction but plateaued at 71%-75% in 2013-2015, a level 15%-20% lower than that of other routine childhood vaccines. Pooled VE of full series RV5 and RV1 against rotavirus-associated hospitalizations and emergency department visits were 84% (95% CI: 80%-87%) and 83% (95% CI: 72%-89%), respectively. Vaccine introduction resulted in a median decline in rotavirus-associated hospitalizations and ED visits of 80% and 57%, respectively, along with indirect protection of unvaccinated age groups and a decrease in health care costs. A biennial pattern in rotavirus detection emerged post-vaccine implementation. Expert Commentary: The increasing use of rotavirus vaccines has substantially diminished the burden and changed the epidemiology of rotavirus disease in US children; efforts to increase rotavirus vaccine coverage should continue. |
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