Pediatric COVID-19 in Lesotho and Post-pandemic Implications on Lower Respiratory Infections in Children

莱索托儿童新冠肺炎疫情及其对后疫情时代儿童下呼吸道感染的影响

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Abstract

Background The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Reaching Impact, Saturation, and Epidemic Control (RISE) program funded Jhpiego to support the Government of Lesotho's COVID-19 response, including two national COVID-19 treatment centers. To evaluate the status of post-pandemic pediatric respiratory care in Lesotho, we analyzed pediatric treatment center data and healthcare worker (HCW) performance on pediatric COVID-19 training offered to HCWs at COVID-19 treatment centers. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients 15 years of age or less hospitalized at two COVID-19 treatment centers in Lesotho from May 1, 2020, to April 30, 2022. Patient data were extracted from hospital files. We used the independent sample t-test, Mann-Whitney U test, or Fisher's exact test to evaluate associations between exposure variables and death. We also assessed differences between pre- and post-training examination scores of three one-day HCW training on pediatric COVID-19 using paired t-tests. Results Overall, <15-year-olds comprised 18/1,448 (1.2%) hospitalizations. Twenty-two percent (4/18) of children were hypoxemic (oxyhemoglobin saturation <94%) within the first 24 hours and 44% (8/18) at any point in the hospitalization. Oxygen utilization increased over the two-year period (p=0.004) and all eight children with hypoxemia received oxygen (p<0.001). Four of 18 (22%) patients died. For HCW training, pre- and post-training examinations were completed by 76/82 (92.7%) participants. The overall mean pretraining score was 44.6% (standard deviation (SD) 15.7%). Mean scores improved by an average of 32.2% (95% confidence interval (CI) 27.7%, 36.6%, p<0.001) on the same day post-training examination. Conclusions National COVID-19 treatment center data indicate a low burden of severe pediatric COVID-19 disease in Lesotho. However, recognized HCW knowledge gaps suggest deficiencies in identifying and referring severely ill children, which may detrimentally impact the ongoing post-pandemic care of children with severe lower respiratory infections.

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