Bibliography of published COVID-19 in children literature
Bibliography of published COVID-19 in children literature
Background: the COVID-19 pandemic is the biggest worldwide health challenge in this century. Research concerning the role of children in the spread of SARS-CoV-2, and investigating the clinical effects of infection in children, has been vital. This paper describes the publication trend for pertinent scientific literature relating to COVID-19 in children during the first 6 months of the pandemic.
Methods: a comprehensive search of preprint and published literature was conducted daily across four databases (PubMed, Scopus, Ovid-Embase and MedRXiv) between 1 January 2020 and 30 June 2020. Titles and abstracts were screened against predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Findings: over the study period, a total of 45 453 papers were retrieved, of which 476 met our inclusion criteria. The cumulative number of children described in included publications totalled (at most) 41 396. The median number of children per paper was 6 (IQR 1-33). Nearly one-third of papers (30.2%) reported on a single child, and a further 28.3% reported on between 1 and 9 children. Half of all the publications originated from Asia.
Interpretation: our prospective bibliographic analysis of paediatric COVID-19 publications demonstrated a steady increase in the number of papers over time. Understanding and policy evolved with new information that was gathered over the course of the study period. However, over half of publications were individual case reports or small case series, which may have had a limited contribution to advancement of knowledge. During a pandemic, literature should be interpreted with great caution, and clinical/policy decisions should be continually reviewed in light of emerging evidence.
COVID-19, data collection, epidemiology
Stilwell, Philippa Anna
53562b80-cfd5-4345-8c09-9f2f331e1b6a
Munro, Alasdair P.S.
59dacf7d-5977-49c4-b562-b2c719c9dcf4
Basatemur, Emre
10457e5e-f6aa-4b73-9748-06d7578625f8
Talawila Da Camara, Nishanthi
7789c945-5720-4f64-ad8b-a98961bfc8c4
Harwood, Rachel
7c4ee431-89f4-4a9f-a050-24fd4e361295
Roland, Damian
bac42549-2249-4b39-b272-4d11f451574a
6 May 2021
Stilwell, Philippa Anna
53562b80-cfd5-4345-8c09-9f2f331e1b6a
Munro, Alasdair P.S.
59dacf7d-5977-49c4-b562-b2c719c9dcf4
Basatemur, Emre
10457e5e-f6aa-4b73-9748-06d7578625f8
Talawila Da Camara, Nishanthi
7789c945-5720-4f64-ad8b-a98961bfc8c4
Harwood, Rachel
7c4ee431-89f4-4a9f-a050-24fd4e361295
Roland, Damian
bac42549-2249-4b39-b272-4d11f451574a
Stilwell, Philippa Anna, Munro, Alasdair P.S., Basatemur, Emre, Talawila Da Camara, Nishanthi, Harwood, Rachel and Roland, Damian
(2021)
Bibliography of published COVID-19 in children literature.
Archives of Disease in Childhood.
(doi:10.1136/archdischild-2021-321751).
Abstract
Background: the COVID-19 pandemic is the biggest worldwide health challenge in this century. Research concerning the role of children in the spread of SARS-CoV-2, and investigating the clinical effects of infection in children, has been vital. This paper describes the publication trend for pertinent scientific literature relating to COVID-19 in children during the first 6 months of the pandemic.
Methods: a comprehensive search of preprint and published literature was conducted daily across four databases (PubMed, Scopus, Ovid-Embase and MedRXiv) between 1 January 2020 and 30 June 2020. Titles and abstracts were screened against predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Findings: over the study period, a total of 45 453 papers were retrieved, of which 476 met our inclusion criteria. The cumulative number of children described in included publications totalled (at most) 41 396. The median number of children per paper was 6 (IQR 1-33). Nearly one-third of papers (30.2%) reported on a single child, and a further 28.3% reported on between 1 and 9 children. Half of all the publications originated from Asia.
Interpretation: our prospective bibliographic analysis of paediatric COVID-19 publications demonstrated a steady increase in the number of papers over time. Understanding and policy evolved with new information that was gathered over the course of the study period. However, over half of publications were individual case reports or small case series, which may have had a limited contribution to advancement of knowledge. During a pandemic, literature should be interpreted with great caution, and clinical/policy decisions should be continually reviewed in light of emerging evidence.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 25 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 May 2021
Published date: 6 May 2021
Keywords:
COVID-19, data collection, epidemiology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453494
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453494
ISSN: 0003-9888
PURE UUID: 5478c9c9-6a11-4149-a4c8-a0df7da6fc6e
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Date deposited: 18 Jan 2022 17:40
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 13:44
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Contributors
Author:
Philippa Anna Stilwell
Author:
Alasdair P.S. Munro
Author:
Emre Basatemur
Author:
Nishanthi Talawila Da Camara
Author:
Rachel Harwood
Author:
Damian Roland
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