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Bulletin of the World Health Organization logoLink to Bulletin of the World Health Organization
. 1995;73(6):779–785.

Severe illness in African children with diarrhoea: implications for case management strategies.

L A Lee 1, R Dogore 1, S C Redd 1, E Dogore 1, B Metchock 1, J Diabate 1, O W van Assendelft 1, K DeCock 1, E Patrick 1, J Herrington 1
PMCID: PMC2486685  PMID: 8907771

Abstract

To identify clinical disorders associated with severe illness in African children with diarrhoea, we studied a group of under-5-year-olds with diarrhoea who had been brought to a large public hospital in central Cote d'Ivoire. The general condition of children with diarrhoea was assessed and classified according to criteria recommended by WHO, and then used as a nonspecific indicator of severity. Of the 264 children with diarrhoea who were enrolled in the study, 196 had nonsevere illness and 68 severe illness. Children with severe illness were significantly more likely than those with nonsevere illness to be dehydrated (45% versus 11%), moderate-to-severely wasted (47% versus 29%), bacteraemic (26% versus 9%), severely anaemic (haemoglobin level <6 g/dl; 15% versus 6%), have Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia (27% versus 14%), and have two or more of these five conditions (60% versus 14%). Nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. were present in 68% of the blood isolates but were not associated with seropositivity to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The study demonstrates the need for a more comprehensive approach to assessment and management of children with diarrhoea that ensures prompt recognition of bacteraemia, anaemia, wasting and malaria, as well as dehydration. Simple nonspecific observational criteria, such as those recommended by WHO for assessing and classifying general condition, are useful for identifying children with diarrhoea who are at high risk of having life-threatening clinical disorders, and can readily be used by health workers whose clinical training and access to diagnostic laboratory facilities are both limited.

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Selected References

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