A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings

Pneumonia is a major cause of child mortality among children under five years, worldwide. Pneumonia infection may be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi in single or in both lungs. According to recent criteria developed by World Health Organization (WHO) in September (2013), pneumonia can be class...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yasmin Jahan, Atiqur Rahman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-01-01
Series:Respiratory Medicine Case Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213007118300534
id doaj-ed2e2b1dbb0d426093636213937e5048
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ed2e2b1dbb0d426093636213937e50482020-11-24T21:21:46ZengElsevierRespiratory Medicine Case Reports2213-00712018-01-0125192195A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settingsYasmin Jahan0Atiqur Rahman1Graduate School of Biomedical & Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Japan; Corresponding author.School of Health, University of New England, AustraliaPneumonia is a major cause of child mortality among children under five years, worldwide. Pneumonia infection may be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi in single or in both lungs. According to recent criteria developed by World Health Organization (WHO) in September (2013), pneumonia can be classified into severe pneumonia, pneumonia and no pneumonia. Most of the deaths occur from severe pneumonia and management of severe childhood pneumonia requires early identification, prompt referral and the availability of intensive quality of care. This case study aimed to represent the actual scenario of severe childhood pneumonia case management at community clinic. Considering that circumstances, International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b) developed an innovative day care management approach as safe, effective and less expensive alternative to hospital management of severe childhood pneumonia. A twenty-seven months old boy came to the Health & Family Welfare Centre (HFWC) with severe breathing difficulty, cough, history of fever. The management described below was continued daily until there was clinical improvement; no fever, no fast breathing, no lower chest wall indrawing, no danger signs, no rales on auscultation and no hypoxemia. Considering the WHO case management protocol for severe pneumonia, day care management approach on community clinic recommends that diagnosis of severe pneumonia should be based primarily on visible clinical parameters. On that basis, severe childhood pneumonia can be successfully managed at community clinics including for children with hypoxemia who is required prolong (4–6 hours) oxygen therapy. Keywords: Community clinic, Day care management, Severe childhood pneumoniahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213007118300534
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasmin Jahan
Atiqur Rahman
spellingShingle Yasmin Jahan
Atiqur Rahman
A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
Respiratory Medicine Case Reports
author_facet Yasmin Jahan
Atiqur Rahman
author_sort Yasmin Jahan
title A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
title_short A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
title_full A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
title_fullStr A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
title_full_unstemmed A case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
title_sort case report on management of severe childhood pneumonia in low resource settings
publisher Elsevier
series Respiratory Medicine Case Reports
issn 2213-0071
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Pneumonia is a major cause of child mortality among children under five years, worldwide. Pneumonia infection may be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi in single or in both lungs. According to recent criteria developed by World Health Organization (WHO) in September (2013), pneumonia can be classified into severe pneumonia, pneumonia and no pneumonia. Most of the deaths occur from severe pneumonia and management of severe childhood pneumonia requires early identification, prompt referral and the availability of intensive quality of care. This case study aimed to represent the actual scenario of severe childhood pneumonia case management at community clinic. Considering that circumstances, International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research, Bangladesh (icddr,b) developed an innovative day care management approach as safe, effective and less expensive alternative to hospital management of severe childhood pneumonia. A twenty-seven months old boy came to the Health & Family Welfare Centre (HFWC) with severe breathing difficulty, cough, history of fever. The management described below was continued daily until there was clinical improvement; no fever, no fast breathing, no lower chest wall indrawing, no danger signs, no rales on auscultation and no hypoxemia. Considering the WHO case management protocol for severe pneumonia, day care management approach on community clinic recommends that diagnosis of severe pneumonia should be based primarily on visible clinical parameters. On that basis, severe childhood pneumonia can be successfully managed at community clinics including for children with hypoxemia who is required prolong (4–6 hours) oxygen therapy. Keywords: Community clinic, Day care management, Severe childhood pneumonia
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213007118300534
work_keys_str_mv AT yasminjahan acasereportonmanagementofseverechildhoodpneumoniainlowresourcesettings
AT atiqurrahman acasereportonmanagementofseverechildhoodpneumoniainlowresourcesettings
AT yasminjahan casereportonmanagementofseverechildhoodpneumoniainlowresourcesettings
AT atiqurrahman casereportonmanagementofseverechildhoodpneumoniainlowresourcesettings
_version_ 1725998430700961792