The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Etiology of diarrhea among children under the age five in China: Results from a five-year surveillance

Etiology of diarrhea among children under the age five in China: Results from a five-year surveillance
Etiology of diarrhea among children under the age five in China: Results from a five-year surveillance
Objectives: diarrhea is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality for children, although sparse data is available on the etiology of diarrhea in China. This study was conducted to determine main causes that underlie childhood diarrhea and related diseases.

Method: surveillance data for diarrhea was collected from 213 participating hospitals between 2009 and 2013. These stool specimens, from children aged 0–59 months, were then analyzed for a panel of etiological agents consisting of 5 viruses, 8 bacteria and 3 protozoa. The proportion of children who tested positive for each pathogen was calculated and seasonal patterns for major organisms were determined.

Results: pathogens were identified in 44.6% of the 32,189 samples from children with diarrhea. The most commonly detected pathogens were rotavirus (29.7% of cases), norovirus (11.8%), Diarrheagenic Escherichia coli (DEC; 5.0%), adenovirus (4.8%), non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS; 4.3%), and Shigella spp. (3.6%). A strong seasonal pattern was observed for these organisms, including rotavirus (winter), norovirus (autumn), and DEC, NTS, and Shigella (summer).

Conclusion: a wide range of enteropathogens were detected in this five-year surveillance study; rotavirus and norovirus were most common among children under the age five. These findings should serve as robust evidence for public health entities when planning and developing national intervention programs in China
0163-4453
1-9
Yu, Jianxing
992198dd-6055-4905-ab28-11ced790c57c
Jing, Huaiqi
58ab0211-3a7f-41a6-9dd1-8763f3228ee4
Lai, Shengjie
b57a5fe8-cfb6-4fa7-b414-a98bb891b001
Xu, Wenbo
0a61a899-231f-474c-aca6-74abc96d5cbc
Li, Mengfeng
e2037ad9-9772-45a8-9c63-bc7a38b7c0ad
Wu, Jianguo
ac62a636-3c48-4a39-8eb2-04156a2b4409
Liu, Wei
a14d7956-a55e-4e3c-aa61-2d368c7498a1
Yuan, Zhenghong
fe0454ed-2983-4aae-960b-e9412d8536e8
Chen, Yu
b7c530d5-7aa6-4515-ac71-907f6673423b
Zhao, Shiwen
c1a21339-eeea-4fa3-aded-2eac10520ca0
Wang, Xinhua
d2e09ebe-cb08-4c18-9aec-30eb795801e4
Zhao, Zhuo
3ea911e8-358e-4700-9391-27639083bb52
Ran, Lu
c57057b5-d8cb-49c3-83c4-f91fd7b10e2d
Wu, Shuyu
d7558fad-cebf-4aee-b7b7-7741d3ba97e4
Klena, John D.
1cc2f73d-c872-445a-81d8-5448a0ac63da
Feng, Luzhao
5842cd78-bfa7-40d1-ae76-92ca4bf70c4d
Li, Fu
ab818f7a-431d-453d-8bfb-a4a9894e4fe5
Ye, Xianfei
4fe57a89-5c21-4bee-a629-7436a48974a1
Qiu, Yanzi
0177337d-54bb-4fdc-a411-b2ff6e04ff84
Wang, Xin
f82c793a-e84e-488d-ae40-002c1ad1aa3d
Yu, Hongjie
f6a43c0c-0da8-4124-bd15-cd832d6fee7c
Li, Zhongjie
f89a98f7-f6d3-4312-995a-bc658ae9a93f
Yang, Weizhong
65d18fbc-d752-42a7-ac38-01534ceda15c
Yu, Jianxing
992198dd-6055-4905-ab28-11ced790c57c
Jing, Huaiqi
58ab0211-3a7f-41a6-9dd1-8763f3228ee4
Lai, Shengjie
b57a5fe8-cfb6-4fa7-b414-a98bb891b001
Xu, Wenbo
0a61a899-231f-474c-aca6-74abc96d5cbc
Li, Mengfeng
e2037ad9-9772-45a8-9c63-bc7a38b7c0ad
Wu, Jianguo
ac62a636-3c48-4a39-8eb2-04156a2b4409
Liu, Wei
a14d7956-a55e-4e3c-aa61-2d368c7498a1
Yuan, Zhenghong
fe0454ed-2983-4aae-960b-e9412d8536e8
Chen, Yu
b7c530d5-7aa6-4515-ac71-907f6673423b
Zhao, Shiwen
c1a21339-eeea-4fa3-aded-2eac10520ca0
Wang, Xinhua
d2e09ebe-cb08-4c18-9aec-30eb795801e4
Zhao, Zhuo
3ea911e8-358e-4700-9391-27639083bb52
Ran, Lu
c57057b5-d8cb-49c3-83c4-f91fd7b10e2d
Wu, Shuyu
d7558fad-cebf-4aee-b7b7-7741d3ba97e4
Klena, John D.
1cc2f73d-c872-445a-81d8-5448a0ac63da
Feng, Luzhao
5842cd78-bfa7-40d1-ae76-92ca4bf70c4d
Li, Fu
ab818f7a-431d-453d-8bfb-a4a9894e4fe5
Ye, Xianfei
4fe57a89-5c21-4bee-a629-7436a48974a1
Qiu, Yanzi
0177337d-54bb-4fdc-a411-b2ff6e04ff84
Wang, Xin
f82c793a-e84e-488d-ae40-002c1ad1aa3d
Yu, Hongjie
f6a43c0c-0da8-4124-bd15-cd832d6fee7c
Li, Zhongjie
f89a98f7-f6d3-4312-995a-bc658ae9a93f
Yang, Weizhong
65d18fbc-d752-42a7-ac38-01534ceda15c

Yu, Jianxing, Jing, Huaiqi, Lai, Shengjie, Xu, Wenbo, Li, Mengfeng, Wu, Jianguo, Liu, Wei, Yuan, Zhenghong, Chen, Yu, Zhao, Shiwen, Wang, Xinhua, Zhao, Zhuo, Ran, Lu, Wu, Shuyu, Klena, John D., Feng, Luzhao, Li, Fu, Ye, Xianfei, Qiu, Yanzi, Wang, Xin, Yu, Hongjie, Li, Zhongjie and Yang, Weizhong (2015) Etiology of diarrhea among children under the age five in China: Results from a five-year surveillance. Journal of Infection, 1-9. (doi:10.1016/j.jinf.2015.03.001). (PMID:25753104)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: diarrhea is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality for children, although sparse data is available on the etiology of diarrhea in China. This study was conducted to determine main causes that underlie childhood diarrhea and related diseases.

Method: surveillance data for diarrhea was collected from 213 participating hospitals between 2009 and 2013. These stool specimens, from children aged 0–59 months, were then analyzed for a panel of etiological agents consisting of 5 viruses, 8 bacteria and 3 protozoa. The proportion of children who tested positive for each pathogen was calculated and seasonal patterns for major organisms were determined.

Results: pathogens were identified in 44.6% of the 32,189 samples from children with diarrhea. The most commonly detected pathogens were rotavirus (29.7% of cases), norovirus (11.8%), Diarrheagenic Escherichia coli (DEC; 5.0%), adenovirus (4.8%), non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS; 4.3%), and Shigella spp. (3.6%). A strong seasonal pattern was observed for these organisms, including rotavirus (winter), norovirus (autumn), and DEC, NTS, and Shigella (summer).

Conclusion: a wide range of enteropathogens were detected in this five-year surveillance study; rotavirus and norovirus were most common among children under the age five. These findings should serve as robust evidence for public health entities when planning and developing national intervention programs in China

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 March 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 March 2015
Organisations: WorldPop, Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 375145
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375145
ISSN: 0163-4453
PURE UUID: cd7251fa-bcf2-4179-85ef-5812797945b0
ORCID for Shengjie Lai: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9781-8148

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Mar 2015 10:22
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:02

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Jianxing Yu
Author: Huaiqi Jing
Author: Shengjie Lai ORCID iD
Author: Wenbo Xu
Author: Mengfeng Li
Author: Jianguo Wu
Author: Wei Liu
Author: Zhenghong Yuan
Author: Yu Chen
Author: Shiwen Zhao
Author: Xinhua Wang
Author: Zhuo Zhao
Author: Lu Ran
Author: Shuyu Wu
Author: John D. Klena
Author: Luzhao Feng
Author: Fu Li
Author: Xianfei Ye
Author: Yanzi Qiu
Author: Xin Wang
Author: Hongjie Yu
Author: Zhongjie Li
Author: Weizhong Yang

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×