Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017

Abstract Background Acute Respiratory infection accounts for 94,037000 disability adjusted life years and 1.9 million deaths worldwide. Acute respiratory infections is the most common causes of under-five illness and mortality. The under five children gets three to six episodes of acute respiratory...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sielu Alemayehu, Kalayou Kidanu, Tensay Kahsay, Mekuria Kassa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-019-1767-1
id doaj-748fc57f408148d3b54513a4ad582a50
record_format Article
spelling doaj-748fc57f408148d3b54513a4ad582a502020-11-25T03:53:28ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312019-10-011911810.1186/s12887-019-1767-1Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017Sielu Alemayehu0Kalayou Kidanu1Tensay Kahsay2Mekuria Kassa3Mekelle University, College of Health Sciences, School of NursingMekelle University, College of Health Sciences, School of NursingMekelle University, College of Health Sciences, School of NursingMekelle University, College of Health Sciences, School of NursingAbstract Background Acute Respiratory infection accounts for 94,037000 disability adjusted life years and 1.9 million deaths worldwide. Acute respiratory infections is the most common causes of under-five illness and mortality. The under five children gets three to six episodes of acute respiratory infections annually regardless of where they live. Disease burden due to acute respiratory infection is 10–50 times higher in developing countries when compared to developed countries. The aim of this study was to assess risk factors of acute respiratory infection among under-five children attending Public hospitals in Southern Tigray, Ethiopia 2016/2017. Methods Institution based case control study was conducted from Nov 2016 to June 2017. Interviewer administered structured questionnaire was used to collect data from a sample of 288 (96 cases and 192 controls) children under 5 years of age. Systematic random sampling was used to recruit study subjects and SPSS version 20 was used to analyze the data. Bivariate and multivariate analysis were employed to examine statistical association between the outcome variable and selected independent variables at 95% confidence level. Level of statistical Significance was declared at p < 0.05. Tables, figures and texts were used to present data. Result One hundred sixty (55.6%) and 128 (44.4%) of the participants were males and females respectively. Malnutrition (AOR = 2.89; 95%CI: 1.584–8.951; p = 0.039), cow dung use (AOR =2.21; 95%CI: 1.121–9.373; p = 0.014), presence of smoker in the family (AOR = 0.638; 95% CI: 0.046–0.980; p = 0.042) and maternal literacy (AOR = 3.098; 95%CI: 1.387–18.729; p = 0.021) were found to be significant predictors of acute respiratory infection among under five children. Conclusion According to this study maternal literacy, smoking, cow dung use and nutritional status were strongly associated with increased risk of childhood acute respiratory infection. Health care providers should work jointly with the general public, so that scientific knowledge and guidelines for adopting particular preventive measures for acute respiratory infection are disseminated.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-019-1767-1Children under 5 yearsAcute respiratory infectionsRisk factors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sielu Alemayehu
Kalayou Kidanu
Tensay Kahsay
Mekuria Kassa
spellingShingle Sielu Alemayehu
Kalayou Kidanu
Tensay Kahsay
Mekuria Kassa
Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
BMC Pediatrics
Children under 5 years
Acute respiratory infections
Risk factors
author_facet Sielu Alemayehu
Kalayou Kidanu
Tensay Kahsay
Mekuria Kassa
author_sort Sielu Alemayehu
title Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
title_short Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
title_full Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
title_fullStr Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
title_full_unstemmed Risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern Tigray, Ethiopia, 2016/2017
title_sort risk factors of acute respiratory infections among under five children attending public hospitals in southern tigray, ethiopia, 2016/2017
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Acute Respiratory infection accounts for 94,037000 disability adjusted life years and 1.9 million deaths worldwide. Acute respiratory infections is the most common causes of under-five illness and mortality. The under five children gets three to six episodes of acute respiratory infections annually regardless of where they live. Disease burden due to acute respiratory infection is 10–50 times higher in developing countries when compared to developed countries. The aim of this study was to assess risk factors of acute respiratory infection among under-five children attending Public hospitals in Southern Tigray, Ethiopia 2016/2017. Methods Institution based case control study was conducted from Nov 2016 to June 2017. Interviewer administered structured questionnaire was used to collect data from a sample of 288 (96 cases and 192 controls) children under 5 years of age. Systematic random sampling was used to recruit study subjects and SPSS version 20 was used to analyze the data. Bivariate and multivariate analysis were employed to examine statistical association between the outcome variable and selected independent variables at 95% confidence level. Level of statistical Significance was declared at p < 0.05. Tables, figures and texts were used to present data. Result One hundred sixty (55.6%) and 128 (44.4%) of the participants were males and females respectively. Malnutrition (AOR = 2.89; 95%CI: 1.584–8.951; p = 0.039), cow dung use (AOR =2.21; 95%CI: 1.121–9.373; p = 0.014), presence of smoker in the family (AOR = 0.638; 95% CI: 0.046–0.980; p = 0.042) and maternal literacy (AOR = 3.098; 95%CI: 1.387–18.729; p = 0.021) were found to be significant predictors of acute respiratory infection among under five children. Conclusion According to this study maternal literacy, smoking, cow dung use and nutritional status were strongly associated with increased risk of childhood acute respiratory infection. Health care providers should work jointly with the general public, so that scientific knowledge and guidelines for adopting particular preventive measures for acute respiratory infection are disseminated.
topic Children under 5 years
Acute respiratory infections
Risk factors
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-019-1767-1
work_keys_str_mv AT sielualemayehu riskfactorsofacuterespiratoryinfectionsamongunderfivechildrenattendingpublichospitalsinsoutherntigrayethiopia20162017
AT kalayoukidanu riskfactorsofacuterespiratoryinfectionsamongunderfivechildrenattendingpublichospitalsinsoutherntigrayethiopia20162017
AT tensaykahsay riskfactorsofacuterespiratoryinfectionsamongunderfivechildrenattendingpublichospitalsinsoutherntigrayethiopia20162017
AT mekuriakassa riskfactorsofacuterespiratoryinfectionsamongunderfivechildrenattendingpublichospitalsinsoutherntigrayethiopia20162017
_version_ 1724477851765309440