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© 1995 Oxford University Press

research-article

Maternal Reporting of Acute Respiratory Infection in Egypt

LEE H HARRISON*, SALAMA MOURSI**, A H GUINENA{dagger}, ANNE M GADOMSKI*,{ddagger}, K S EL-ANSARY**, NAGWA KHALLAF** and ROBERT E BLACK*

* Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health Room 5515, 615 N Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
** Acute Respiratory Infections Unit, Child Survial Project, Ministry of Health Cairo, Egypt.
{dagger} Assiut University Assiut, Egypt.
{ddagger} Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore, MD, USA.

BACKGROUND: Acute respiratory infection (ARI) is a major cause of childhood morbidity and mortality in developing countries. Community surveys are used to determine the proportion of children with ARI for whom care is sought by questioning mothers about the signs and symptoms of illness episodes. The validity of this approach has been studied infrequently.

METHODS: We evaluated maternal reporting of signs and symptoms 2 and 4 weeks after diagnosis among 271 Egyptian children <5 years old. Children with ARI were evaluated by physical examination, chest radiography, and pulse oximetry, and were alternately assigned for a maternal interview about the episode 14 or 28 days later.

RESULTS: For radiographically-defined acute lower respiratory Infection (ALRI), the sensitivity of several symptoms for combined open- and close-ended questions was relatively high nahagan (deep or rapid breathing) (80%), nafas sarle (fast breathing) (66%), and kharfasha (coarse breath sounds) (63%). The specificity of these terms was 50–68%. The specificity was inversely related to the follow-up time. No term provided both a sensitivity and specificity of >50% at day 28 across the radiographically, clinically- and pulse oximetry-based definitions of ALRI. Spontaneously mentioned karshet nafas (difficult or rapid breathing) at 14 days had a specificity and sensitivity for radiographic ALRI of 87% and 41%, respectively, suggesting that this term is a good choice for community surveys.

CONCLUSIONS: Maternal reporting of ARI symptoms is non-specific 2 and 4 weeks after diagnosis but may be useful for monitoring trends in the proportion of children with pneumonia who receive medical care. To maximize specificity, ARI programmes should generally use a recall period of 2 weeks.

Keywords acute respiratory infection, valldation, maternal reporting


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Journal of Mixed Methods ResearchHome page
K. M. Yount and J. Gittelsohn
Comparing Reports of Health-Seeking Behavior From the Integrated Illness History and a Standard Child Morbidity Survey
Journal of Mixed Methods Research, January 1, 2008; 2(1): 23 - 62.
[Abstract] [PDF]



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