Contemporary gastroenteritis of infancy: clinical features and prehospital management.
- 18 February 1984
- Vol. 288 (6416) , 521-523
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.288.6416.521
Abstract
In a prospective survey carried out over 12 months 447 children aged under 2 years were admitted to the Manchester Regional Infectious Diseases Unit for treatment of gastroenteritis. Comparison of the children with those in a survey 15 years previously in the same unit showed that the illness was milder than in the earlier series, with no deaths and with lower incidences of hypernatraemia (1%), uraemia (8%), and dehydration (14%). These improved findings occurred despite several deficiencies of care in the prehospital phase of the illness, particularly poor compliance with the widely recommended guidelines for fluid and dietary management in infantile gastroenteritis.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gastroenteritis in Britain: management at home.BMJ, 1981
- ASPIRIN AND FLUID LOSSES IN DIARRHŒAThe Lancet, 1980
- The Declining Incidence of Infantile Hypernatremic Dehydration in Great BritainArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1979
- GASTROENTERITIS: A CONTINUING PROBLEM OF CHILD HEALTH IN BRITAINThe Lancet, 1977
- Hospitalisation for infantile diarrhoea.1977
- Survey of gastroenteritis in children admitted to hospital in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1971-5.BMJ, 1977
- Plasma Osmolality and Feeding Practices of Healthy Infants in First Three Months of LifeBMJ, 1973
- Hyperosmolar dehydration in infancy due to faulty feeding.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1972