Abstract

BackgroundIncreased co-morbidities and physiological changes mean older patients may be at higher risk of adverse outcomes from certain imported illnesses. One of the most commonly diagnosed imported infections in returning travelers is malaria. Increasing age is strongly and independently associated with increasing morbidity and mortality from malaria. Delayed diagnosis leads to higher risks of poor clinical outcomes in older patients presenting with malaria. The objective of this study was to quantify malaria presentations in older patients as a percentage of total malaria presentations, compare length of hospital stay (LOS) between the older and younger cohort, and to describe medical co-morbidities, length of time to diagnosis and factors contributing to delayed diagnosis and increased LOS in the older cohort.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was undertaken in two university hospitals of all patients aged 65 years or older presenting with malaria from 2002–2012. A national hospital inpatient database was used to identify patients of all ages with a discharge diagnosis of malaria over this ten year period, and quantify LOS in those aged <65 and those aged 65 years or older. The case-notes for all of the older cohort were reviewed.ResultsThere were a total of 203 cases, 12 of whom were aged ≥65 years (5.9 %- total). Median time to diagnosis in this older group was two days (range 0–35), median LOS was eight days (range 1–77), compared to a median LOS of three days in those aged <65 years. All patients aged ≥65 years presented with fever. Travel history was documented in only 6/12 charts, and 11/12 had two or more co-morbid illnesses. Six of the 12 patients were not diagnosed or treated within 48 h of presentation.ConclusionsThis case series highlights the need for appropriate history-taking and timely diagnosis of the older traveler returning with fever, as delayed diagnosis and treatment can contribute to prolonged hospital stay and increased morbidity. With increasing numbers of older travelers, physicians must remain vigilant to the presence of imported illnesses, particularly malaria, in older patients with unexplained fever.

Highlights

  • Increased co-morbidities and physiological changes mean older patients may be at higher risk of adverse outcomes from certain imported illnesses

  • Due to increased number of co-morbidities and physiological changes, these older patients are at higher risk of adverse outcomes from certain imported illnesses, malaria [3], it is of paramount importance to diagnose these infections as quickly as possible

  • A case report form was designed to collect information about patient demographics and co-morbidities, presenting features, time to diagnosis, potential factors contributing to delayed diagnosis, and length of hospital stay (LOS) in the older population

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Increased co-morbidities and physiological changes mean older patients may be at higher risk of adverse outcomes from certain imported illnesses. The objective of this study was to quantify malaria presentations in older patients as a percentage of total malaria presentations, compare length of hospital stay (LOS) between the older and younger cohort, and to describe medical co-morbidities, length of time to diagnosis and factors contributing to delayed diagnosis and increased LOS in the older cohort. Due to increased number of co-morbidities and physiological changes, these older patients are at higher risk of adverse outcomes from certain imported illnesses, malaria [3], it is of paramount importance to diagnose these infections as quickly as possible. Each case of malaria in an older patient was reviewed in detail to assess whether travel history was being considered in older patients, to quantify delays to diagnosis and treatment, and to assess the impact of patient demographic factors and medical co-morbidities, in order to identify reasons for poorer clinical outcomes

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call