IMPACT OF VIRAL RESPIRATORY DISEASES ON INFANTS AND YOUNG CHILDREN IN A RURAL AND URBAN AREA OF SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA1
- 1 April 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in American Journal of Epidemiology
- Vol. 117 (4) , 467-474
- https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a113564
Abstract
Belshe, R. B. (Dept. of Medicine, Marshall University School of Medicine, Huntington, WV 25701), L P. Van Voris and M. A. Mufson. impact of viral respiratory diseases on infants and young children in a rural and urban area of southern West Virginia. Am J Epidemiol 1983; 117: 467–74. Acute viral respiratory disease occurring in children residing in the community of Huntington, West Virginia (urban children) or in the hollows surrounding Huntington (rural children) was evaluated from September 1978 through March 1980. Cohorts of ambulatory children residing in each area were studied for the occurrence of mild to moderate respiratory disease. All children admitted to hospitals were evaluated for the occurrence of severe viral respiratory disease. Respiratory secretions were obtained from children for isolation of viruses. Epidemics of illnesses occurred simultaneously in the urban and rural groups of children. Among both the urban and rural ambulatory children, adenoviruses were the most common viruses isolated, and respiratory syncytial virus was the second most common viral pathogen isolated. Among the urban and rural hospitalized children, respiratory syncytlal virus was the most common virus isolated. The distribution of the diagnoses, pneumonia, bronchlolitis, or croup, was similar among the urban and rural children who required hospltalization. The risk of hospitalization because of respiratory disease was found to be one in every 20 children during the first four years of life, and the estimated risk of hospitalization because of respiratory syncytial virus infection was one in 30. No differences were detected in the incidence of severe viral respiratory disease among children residing in urban or rural areas in southern West Virginia.Keywords
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