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. 2015 Feb;3(1):31–38. doi: 10.1177/2050640614558346

Table 1.

Estimated number of Salmonella cases in the KiGGS cohort for the year 2005

Age groupa Salmonella incidenceb in 2005
Birth yearc KiGGS participantsd
Estimated KiGGS Salmonella casese
Male Female Male Female Male Female
00..00 176 181 2005 155 154 0.2728 0.2784
01..01 349 369 2004 457 466 1.5949 1.7195
02..02 356 376 2003 315 305 1.1214 1.1468
03..03 312 311 2002 479 435 1.4944 1.3528
04..04 277 267 2001 477 485 1.3212 1.2949
05..05 173 164 2000 496 507 0.8580 0.8314
06..06 173 164 1999 464 482 0.8027 0.7904
07..07 173 164 1998 513 481 0.8874 0.7888
08..08 173 164 1997 508 512 0.8788 0.8396
09..09 173 164 1996 545 509 0.9428 0.8298
10..10 100 83 1995 527 506 0.5270 0.4199
11..11 100 83 1994 562 486 0.5620 0.4033
12..12 100 83 1993 508 499 0.5080 0.4141
13..13 100 83 1992 522 478 0.5220 0.3967
14..14 100 83 1991 557 478 0.5570 0.3967
15..15 67 64 1990 503 514 0.3370 0.3289
16..16 67 64 1989 485 431 0.3249 0.2758
17..17 67 64 1988 456 446 0.3055 0.2854
Total number of cases 13,817 13,189
a

Age grouping in 2005. bNumber of Salmonella cases per 100,000 for the year 2005 as reported by the Robert Koch-Institute registry.1 cBirth year of KiGGS participants. dNumber of males in females in the KiGGS cohort. eEstimated Salmonella cases by multiplying the incidence (column 2 or 3) with the number of cases in each birth group (column 5 or 6, respectively). KiGGS: German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Children and Adolescents.