Abstract

BackgroundInfectious diseases are the leading cause of hospital admissions in young children. Hospitalisation with an infectious disease is a recurrent event for some children. Our objective was to describe risk factors for infectious disease readmission following hospital admission with an infectious disease in the first two years of life.MethodsWe performed a national cohort study of New Zealand children, born 2005–2009, with an infectious disease admission before age 24 months. Children readmitted with an infectious disease within 12 months of the first infectious disease admission were identified. Every infectious disease admission was categorised as a respiratory, enteric, skin and soft tissue, urinary or other infection. Independent associations of demographic and child health factors with infectious disease readmission were determined using multiple variable logistic regression.ResultsFrom 2005 to 2011, there were 69,902 infectious disease admissions for 46,657 children less than two years old. Of these 46,657 children, 10,205 (22%) had at least one infectious disease readmission within 12 months of their first admission. The first infectious disease admission was respiratory (54%), enteric (15%), skin or soft tissue (7%), urinary (4%) or other (20%). Risk of infectious disease readmission was increased if the first infectious disease admission was respiratory (OR = 1.87, 95% CI 1.78–1.95) but not if it was in any other infectious disease category.Risk factors for respiratory infectious disease readmission were male gender, Pacific or Māori ethnicity, greater household deprivation, presence of a complex chronic condition, or a first respiratory infectious disease admission during autumn or of ≥3 days duration. Fewer factors (younger age, male gender, presence of a complex chronic condition) were associated with enteric infection readmission. The presence of a complex chronic condition was the only factor associated with urinary tract infection readmission and none of the factors were associated with skin or soft tissue infection readmission.ConclusionsIn children less than two years old, infectious disease readmission risk is increased if the first infectious disease admission is a respiratory infectious disease but not if it is another infectious disease category. Risk factors for respiratory infectious disease readmission are different from those for other infectious disease readmissions.

Highlights

  • Infectious diseases are the leading cause of hospital admissions in young children

  • We identified the children hospitalised with an infectious disease (ID) during their first 24 months of life, and the subset of children subsequently readmitted with an ID within 12 months of their initial ID hospitalisation were enrolled in the study

  • Within the acute respiratory infection (ARI), enteric, soft tissue infection (SSTI), urinary tract infection (UTI) or other ID diagnostic groups, we described the risk factors associated with readmission with a second ID episode within the same ID diagnostic group

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious diseases are the leading cause of hospital admissions in young children. Hospitalisation with an infectious disease is a recurrent event for some children. Infectious diseases are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in young children [1]. Hospitalisation rates for infectious diseases are higher in NZ than in other developed countries. In recent decades the rate of infectious disease hospital admissions in NZ has increased [2]. This represents a true increase in disease incidence, attributed to ethnic and social inequalities, and to disparities in social determinants of health including household income, housing conditions, and access to healthcare [2]

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