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. 2015 Nov 16;2015:309648. doi: 10.1155/2015/309648

Table 1.

Norovirus infections in children in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Country Prevalence of norovirus (%) Sample size Year of samples collected Age (years) Reference
Total GI GII GI/GII
Botswana 24 3 21 0 100 2000–2006 ≤1–≥3 [17]
Cameroon 29.6 12.9 16.7 0 54 Oct–Dec 2009 5–15 [18]
Cameroon 4.6 2.2 2.4 0 146 (1244 samples) Sep 2011–Aug 2012 1–17 [19]
Malawi 11.3 1.8 9.4 0.1 1941 July 1997–June 2007 <5 [20]
Tanzania 13.7 270 Dec 2005–Feb 2006 <5 [21]
Tanzania 14.3 0.9 13.3 0.1 1266 2010-2011 ≤2 [22]
Ghana 15.9 3.7 12.2 0 82 Aug 1998–July 2000 ≤2 [23]
Ghana 16.4 1.3 15.1 0 152 Feb 2011–Feb 2012 ≤5 [24]
Ghana 7.4 1.4 6 0 367 Nov 2005–Jan 2006 ≤11 [25]
Nigeria 25.5 1.8 23.6 0 55 June 2010–Jan 2011 ≤5 [26]
Nigeria 32.4 2.6 4.3 1.6 100 Nov 2007–Jan 2008 <5 [27]
Burkina Faso 22.2 8.8 10.5 2.9 418 Nov 2005–Jan 2007 ≤10 [28]
Burkina Faso 12 2.3 9.7 309 May 2009–Mar 2010 <5 [29]
Kenya 6.3 206 Jan 2007–June 2010 <14 [30]
Madagascar 5.9 1.7 4.2 0 237 Nov 2005–Jan 2008 ≤16 [31]
Rwanda 11 3.8 7.2 0 706 Nov 2009–June 2012 ≤5 [32]
South Africa 14.3 1.2 12.7 0.4 245 Jan–Dec 2008 ≤13 [33]
Gabon 23 9.1 13.9 0 317 Mar 2010–June 2011 <5 [34]
Tanzania (Zanzibar) 11.8 0.6 11.2 0 330 April–July, 2011 <5 [35]

Study did not sequence all the norovirus positive samples to determine the genogroups.