Acute lower respiratory tract infections in children: possible criteria for selection of patients for antibiotic therapy and hospital admission

Shann, F.; Hart, K.; Thomas, D.

Bulletin of the World Health Organization 62(5): 749-753

1984


ISSN/ISBN: 0042-9686
PMID: 6334573
Document Number: 427818
Acute lower respiratory tract infections are a common cause of morbidity and mortality in children in the less developed countries. Considering the urgent need for rational protocols for the management of these infections in children and how little is known about the clinical signs that might predict the need for antibiotic therapy in a primary health care setting, a prospective study of the clinical signs in 200 pediatric outpatients presenting with a cough, 100 age-matched controls without cough and 50 children admitted to hospital with pneumonia was carried out. In children with cough, a respiratory rate > 40 or 50/min (or a qualitative impression of tachypnea) is probably the best indicator of the need for starting antibiotic treatment by primary health workers. The presence of fever appeared to be a poor guide to the need for antibiotic therapy. The presence of chest indrawing is a reliable indication that a child with cough should be admitted to a health center or a hospital. Further prospective studies are needed to determine the ability of these clinical signs to predict the course of these infections. [The clinical findings in children in Goroka [Papua New Guinea] who had acute lower respiratory tract infections of varying degrees of severity are presented.].

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