The most common infections occurring in burn children are burn wound infections and catheter-associated septicemia. Characteristics of burn injury predict risk of infection. Children with flame and inhalation injury, TBSA burned >30% and full thickness burns are at high risk of infectious complications.
Identifying the transmission sources and reservoirs of Streptococcus
pneumoniae (SP) is a long-standing question for pneumococcal epidemiology,
transmission dynamics, and vaccine policy. Here we use serotype to identify SP
transmission and examine acquisitions (in the same household, local community, and county,
or of unidentified origin) in a longitudinal cohort of children and adults from the Navajo
Nation and the White Mountain Apache American Indian Tribes. We found that adults acquire
SP relatively more in the household than other age groups, and children 2–8 years old
typically acquire in their own or surrounding communities. Age-specific transmission
probability matrices show that transmissions within household were mostly seen from older
to younger siblings. Outside the household, children most often transmit to other children
in the same age group, showing age-assortative mixing behavior. We find toddlers and older
children to be most involved in SP transmission and acquisition, indicating their role as
key drivers of SP epidemiology. Although infants have high carriage prevalence, they do
not play a central role in transmission of SP compared with toddlers and older children.
Our results are relevant to inform alternative pneumococcal conjugate vaccine dosing
strategies and analytic efforts to inform optimization of vaccine programs, as well as
assessing the transmission dynamics of pathogens transmitted by close contact in
general.
Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) are important pathogens in premature neonates; decreasing glycopeptide susceptibility has been observed among these isolates. The epidemiology of colonization with CoNS, the organisms' vancomycin susceptibilities, and genetic relatedness were studied over 6 months in a tertiary-care neonatal unit. A total of 321 isolates of CoNS were isolated. Seventy-five percent of the infants were colonized at admission, and virtually all were colonized thereafter. Common species were Staphylococcus epidermidis (69%), S. warneri (12%), S. haemolyticus (9.7%), and S. hominis (5.6%). A total of 3.9% of CoNS isolates had decreased vancomycin susceptibility (DVS) (MICs > 2.0 g/ml); isolate recovery was associated with a stay in a neonatal intensive care unit for >28 days (P ؍ 0.039), vancomycin exposure (P ؍ 0.021), and S. warneri colonization (P < 0.0001). Nine of 12 (75%) CoNS with DVS were S. warneri, had enhanceable high-level resistance in vitro, were indistinguishable or closely related by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and were different from 29 vancomycin-susceptible S. warneri isolates. Epidemiological analysis suggested unsuspected nosocomial spread. Species determination in certain settings may aid in the understanding of emerging nosocomial problems.
Our results are important for understanding the temporal risk associated with circulating pathogens in Southern Central Vietnam. Specifically, our results can inform timing of routing seasonal influenza vaccination and for when observed respiratory illness is likely viral, leading to judicious use of antibiotics in the region.
Infection due to Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in young children, especially in developing countries. With the support of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, the majority of these countries have introduced pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV) into their national immunization programs and early data demonstrate a high degree of effectiveness, translating to enormous public health benefit through both direct and indirect (herd) effects. Future vaccination strategy may be focused on maintaining herd effects rather than individual protection. Evaluation of vaccine-type carriage, particularly in pneumonia cases, may be an easy, feasible way of measuring continued vaccine impact.
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