The population-based burden of influenza-associated hospitalization in rural western Kenya, 2007-2009
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World Health Organization
Abstract
Objective To estimate the burden and age-specific rates of influenza-associated hospitalization in rural western Kenya.
Methods All 3924 patients with respiratory illness (defined as acute cough, difficulty in breathing or pleuritic chest pain) who were
hospitalized between June 2007 and May 2009 in any inpatient health facility in the Kenyan district of Bondo were enrolled. Nasopharyngeal
and oropharyngeal swabs were collected and tested for influenza viruses using real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
(RT–PCR). In the calculation of annual rates, adjustments were made for enrolled patients who did not have swabs tested for influenza virus.
Findings Of the 2079 patients with tested swabs, infection with influenza virus was confirmed in 204 (10%); 176, 27 and 1 were found to
be RT–PCR-positive for influenza A virus only, influenza B virus only, and both influenza A and B viruses, respectively. Among those tested
for influenza virus, 6.8% of the children aged <5 years and 14.0% of the patients aged ≥5 years were found positive. The case-fatality rate
among admitted patients with PCR-confirmed infection with influenza virus was 2.0%. The annual rate of hospitalization (per 100 000
population) was 699.8 among patients with respiratory illness and 56.2 among patients with influenza (with 143.7, 18.8, 55.2, 65.1 and 57.3
hospitalized patients with influenza virus per 100 000 people aged <5, 5–19, 20–34, 35–49 and ≥50 years, respectively).
Conclusion In a rural district of western Kenya, the rate of influenza-associated hospitalization was highest among children aged less than
5 years.
