Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study

Background: Childhood poisoning is a common but avoidable problem in developing countries such as Nigeria. Objectives: To determine the pattern of childhood poisoning in the Warri Niger Delta Region of Nigeria. Method: The case notes of all the children seen at Central Hospital Warri, the referenc...

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Main Authors: Gilbert I.M. Ugwu, Blessing O. Okperi, Eunice N. Ugwu, Nekwu E. Okolugbo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2012-06-01
Series:African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/321
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spelling doaj-ae9546ceb56a454197973d2fafcdaffb2020-11-24T23:58:53ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine2071-29282071-29362012-06-0141e1e510.4102/phcfm.v4i1.321137Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective studyGilbert I.M. Ugwu0Blessing O. Okperi1Eunice N. Ugwu2Nekwu E. Okolugbo3Department of Paediatrics Delta State University, Teaching Hospital OgharaDepartment of Paediatrics Delta State University, Teaching Hospital OgharaChevron Hospital WarriDetartment of Otorhinolarygology, Delsu WarriBackground: Childhood poisoning is a common but avoidable problem in developing countries such as Nigeria. Objectives: To determine the pattern of childhood poisoning in the Warri Niger Delta Region of Nigeria. Method: The case notes of all the children seen at Central Hospital Warri, the reference base for the region and GN Children Clinic the pioneer children’s hospital in the region. This is a review of cases over a ten year period, from 2000 to 2009. The information obtained was analysed. Results: A total of 156 children aged 0–16 years diagnosed with poisoning were seen at the central hospital in Warri and at the GN Children’s Clinic which is also in Warri over a 10 year period from 2000 to 2009 under review. The male to female ratio is 2:1, and 75% of the children were aged 5 years or less. Most of the patients were from the low socio-economic class. Most of the poisoning was unintentional and occurred through ingestion (97.6%). Kerosene was the major substance leading to poisoning (56.6%). Alcohol ranked second in the study. Poisoning from drugs was the third most common source of poisoning and in that category most of the indices were in the highest income group. Most of the patients presented with mild symptoms and the mortality rate was 7%. Conclusion: Kerosine was found to be the most common source of poisoning. Most of the poisoning was unintensional and deaths cause by this form of poisoning can be prevented with proper health education and effective enactment of laws that will reduce the incidence of childhood poisoning.https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/321childhoodpoisoningchildhood poisoningNigeriaWarri Niger Delta of Nigeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gilbert I.M. Ugwu
Blessing O. Okperi
Eunice N. Ugwu
Nekwu E. Okolugbo
spellingShingle Gilbert I.M. Ugwu
Blessing O. Okperi
Eunice N. Ugwu
Nekwu E. Okolugbo
Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
childhood
poisoning
childhood poisoning
Nigeria
Warri Niger Delta of Nigeria
author_facet Gilbert I.M. Ugwu
Blessing O. Okperi
Eunice N. Ugwu
Nekwu E. Okolugbo
author_sort Gilbert I.M. Ugwu
title Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
title_short Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
title_full Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
title_fullStr Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Childhood poisoning in Warri, Niger Delta, Nigeria: A ten year retrospective study
title_sort childhood poisoning in warri, niger delta, nigeria: a ten year retrospective study
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
issn 2071-2928
2071-2936
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Background: Childhood poisoning is a common but avoidable problem in developing countries such as Nigeria. Objectives: To determine the pattern of childhood poisoning in the Warri Niger Delta Region of Nigeria. Method: The case notes of all the children seen at Central Hospital Warri, the reference base for the region and GN Children Clinic the pioneer children’s hospital in the region. This is a review of cases over a ten year period, from 2000 to 2009. The information obtained was analysed. Results: A total of 156 children aged 0–16 years diagnosed with poisoning were seen at the central hospital in Warri and at the GN Children’s Clinic which is also in Warri over a 10 year period from 2000 to 2009 under review. The male to female ratio is 2:1, and 75% of the children were aged 5 years or less. Most of the patients were from the low socio-economic class. Most of the poisoning was unintentional and occurred through ingestion (97.6%). Kerosene was the major substance leading to poisoning (56.6%). Alcohol ranked second in the study. Poisoning from drugs was the third most common source of poisoning and in that category most of the indices were in the highest income group. Most of the patients presented with mild symptoms and the mortality rate was 7%. Conclusion: Kerosine was found to be the most common source of poisoning. Most of the poisoning was unintensional and deaths cause by this form of poisoning can be prevented with proper health education and effective enactment of laws that will reduce the incidence of childhood poisoning.
topic childhood
poisoning
childhood poisoning
Nigeria
Warri Niger Delta of Nigeria
url https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/321
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