Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people
Objectives To examine the epidemiology of infectious disease (ID) hospitalizations among Alaska Native (AN) people Methods Hospitalizations with a first-listed ID diagnosis for American Indians and ANs residing in Alaska during 2001–2009 were selected from the Indian Health Service direct and contra...
Other Authors: | , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/21083 |
_version_ | 1821492203049975808 |
---|---|
author2 | Holman, Robert C Hennessy, Thomas W Haberling, Dana L Callinan, Laura S Singleton, Rosalyn J Redd, John T Steiner, Claudia A Bruce, Michael G |
collection | CDC Stacks (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) |
description | Objectives To examine the epidemiology of infectious disease (ID) hospitalizations among Alaska Native (AN) people Methods Hospitalizations with a first-listed ID diagnosis for American Indians and ANs residing in Alaska during 2001–2009 were selected from the Indian Health Service direct and contract health service inpatient data ID hospitalizations to describe the general US population were selected from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample Annual and average annual (2007–2009) hospitalization rates were calculated Results During 2007–2009, IDs accounted for 20% of hospitalizations among AN people The 2007–2009 average annual age-adjusted ID hospitalization rate (2126/100,000 persons) was higher than that for the general US population (1679/100,000; 95% CI 1639–1720) The ID hospitalization rate for AN people increased from 2001 to 2009 (17%, p<0001) Although the rate during 2001–2009 declined for AN infants (<1 year of age; p=003), they had the highest 2007–2009 average annual rate (15106/100,000), which was 3 times the rate for general US infants (5215/100,000; 95% CI 4783–5647) The annual rates for the age groups 1–4, 5–19, 40–49, 50–59 and 70–79 years increased (p<005) The highest 2007–2009 age-adjusted average annual ID hospitalization rates were in the Yukon-Kuskokwim (YK) (3492/100,000) and Kotzebue (3433/100,000) regions; infant rates were 30422/100,000 and 26698/100,000 in these regions, respectively During 2007–2009, lower respiratory tract infections accounted for 39% of all ID hospitalizations and approximately 50% of ID hospitalizations in YK, Kotzebue and Norton Sound, and 74% of infant ID hospitalizations Conclusions The ID hospitalization rate increased for AN people overall The rate for AN people remained higher than that for the general US population, particularly in infants and in the YK and Kotzebue regions Prevention measures to reduce ID morbidity among AN people should be increased in high-risk regions and for diseases with high hospitalization rates |
genre | Circumpolar Health Kuskokwim Alaska Yukon |
genre_facet | Circumpolar Health Kuskokwim Alaska Yukon |
geographic | Indian Norton Sound Yukon |
geographic_facet | Indian Norton Sound Yukon |
id | ftcdc:oai:cdc.stacks:cdc:21083 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
long_lat | ENVELOPE(69.507,69.507,-49.202,-49.202) |
op_collection_id | ftcdc |
op_coverage | Alaska |
op_relation | https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/21083 |
op_source | Int J Circumpolar Health 2013; 72 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftcdc:oai:cdc.stacks:cdc:21083 2025-01-16T21:30:59+00:00 Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people Int J Circumpolar Health Holman, Robert C Hennessy, Thomas W Haberling, Dana L Callinan, Laura S Singleton, Rosalyn J Redd, John T Steiner, Claudia A Bruce, Michael G Alaska https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/21083 English eng https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/21083 Int J Circumpolar Health 2013; 72 Alaska Natives Adolescent Adult Age Factors Aged American Indians or Alaska Natives Child Preschool Female Hospitalization Humans Indians North American Infant Infections/epidemiology Male Middle Aged Respiratory Tract Infections/epidemiology Young Adult ftcdc 2024-12-17T04:13:30Z Objectives To examine the epidemiology of infectious disease (ID) hospitalizations among Alaska Native (AN) people Methods Hospitalizations with a first-listed ID diagnosis for American Indians and ANs residing in Alaska during 2001–2009 were selected from the Indian Health Service direct and contract health service inpatient data ID hospitalizations to describe the general US population were selected from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample Annual and average annual (2007–2009) hospitalization rates were calculated Results During 2007–2009, IDs accounted for 20% of hospitalizations among AN people The 2007–2009 average annual age-adjusted ID hospitalization rate (2126/100,000 persons) was higher than that for the general US population (1679/100,000; 95% CI 1639–1720) The ID hospitalization rate for AN people increased from 2001 to 2009 (17%, p<0001) Although the rate during 2001–2009 declined for AN infants (<1 year of age; p=003), they had the highest 2007–2009 average annual rate (15106/100,000), which was 3 times the rate for general US infants (5215/100,000; 95% CI 4783–5647) The annual rates for the age groups 1–4, 5–19, 40–49, 50–59 and 70–79 years increased (p<005) The highest 2007–2009 age-adjusted average annual ID hospitalization rates were in the Yukon-Kuskokwim (YK) (3492/100,000) and Kotzebue (3433/100,000) regions; infant rates were 30422/100,000 and 26698/100,000 in these regions, respectively During 2007–2009, lower respiratory tract infections accounted for 39% of all ID hospitalizations and approximately 50% of ID hospitalizations in YK, Kotzebue and Norton Sound, and 74% of infant ID hospitalizations Conclusions The ID hospitalization rate increased for AN people overall The rate for AN people remained higher than that for the general US population, particularly in infants and in the YK and Kotzebue regions Prevention measures to reduce ID morbidity among AN people should be increased in high-risk regions and for diseases with high hospitalization rates Other/Unknown Material Circumpolar Health Kuskokwim Alaska Yukon CDC Stacks (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Indian Norton Sound ENVELOPE(69.507,69.507,-49.202,-49.202) Yukon |
spellingShingle | Alaska Natives Adolescent Adult Age Factors Aged American Indians or Alaska Natives Child Preschool Female Hospitalization Humans Indians North American Infant Infections/epidemiology Male Middle Aged Respiratory Tract Infections/epidemiology Young Adult Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title | Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title_full | Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title_fullStr | Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title_full_unstemmed | Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title_short | Increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among Alaska Native people |
title_sort | increasing trend in the rate of infectious disease hospitalizations among alaska native people |
topic | Alaska Natives Adolescent Adult Age Factors Aged American Indians or Alaska Natives Child Preschool Female Hospitalization Humans Indians North American Infant Infections/epidemiology Male Middle Aged Respiratory Tract Infections/epidemiology Young Adult |
topic_facet | Alaska Natives Adolescent Adult Age Factors Aged American Indians or Alaska Natives Child Preschool Female Hospitalization Humans Indians North American Infant Infections/epidemiology Male Middle Aged Respiratory Tract Infections/epidemiology Young Adult |
url | https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/21083 |