Hospitalizations Involving Gastroenteritis in the United States, 1985: The Special Burden of the Disease among the Elderly

While diarrheal disease is a well-recognized problem in children, its impact in the elderly has not been adequately assessed. Among the 4.06 million hospitalizations in 1985 in the McDonnell-Douglas Health Information System database, 98,185 hospitalizations, including 1,130 deaths, had gastroenteri...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of epidemiology 1992-02, Vol.135 (3), p.281-290
Hauptverfasser: Gangarosa, Raymond E., Glass, Roger I., Lew, Judy F., Boring, John R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While diarrheal disease is a well-recognized problem in children, its impact in the elderly has not been adequately assessed. Among the 4.06 million hospitalizations in 1985 in the McDonnell-Douglas Health Information System database, 98,185 hospitalizations, including 1,130 deaths, had gastroenteritis recorded as a discharge diagnosis. The authors analyzed the 87,181 hospitalizations and 514 deaths for which gastroenteritis was one of the top three diagnoses. Gastroenteritis was among the top three diagnoses in 9% of all hospitalizations of children 1–4 years of age, compared with 1.5– of hospitalizations throughout adulthood (≥20 years). Only 0.05% of hospitalizations involving gastroenteritis were fatal for children younger than 5 years, compared with 3% in individuals 80 years or older. While children aged less than 5 years and adults aged 60 years or more each comprised one-fourth of hospitalizations involving gastroenteritis, the older group represented 85% of diarrheal deaths. Age was the most important risk factor for death subsequent to a hospitalization involving gastroenteritis (odds ratio = 52.6, 95% confidence interval 37.0–76.9 for age ≥70 years vs.
ISSN:0002-9262
1476-6256
DOI:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a116282