Deaths with preceding hospitalisations within 180 days in eight countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia: A secondary descriptive analysis of the Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance (CHAMPS) network.

Publication/Presentation Date

3-23-2026

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe (1) the proportion of deaths that were in recently hospitalised children and (2) causes of mortality among deceased children aged 0-59 months with preceding hospitalisations who enrolled in a mortality surveillance programme.

DESIGN: Descriptive study using prospectively collected data.

SETTING: Eight Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance (CHAMPS) community and healthcare sites in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.

PARTICIPANTS: Deaths among children aged 0-59 months enrolled in CHAMPS 2016-2023.

INTERVENTIONS: None.

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Deaths with antecedent hospitalisations within 180 days of death. Causes of death determined by expert panels who reviewed clinical data and histopathologic and microbiologic results from postmortem minimally invasive tissue sampling.

RESULTS: CHAMPS enrolled 8548 deaths; we excluded 3688 neonates who died before discharge or ≤24 hours of birth and 482 with unclear information on antecedent hospitalisations. Out of the 4378 remaining deaths, 16.7% (95% CI 15.7% to 17.9%) were deaths that occurred within 180 days of a hospitalisation (n=733/4378). Of these, 55.7% (95% CI 52.0% to 59.3%) occurred outside healthcare facilities. Among included deaths with minimally invasive tissue sampling completed (n=337), lower respiratory tract infections (41.2%, 95% CI 36.0% to 46.7%), sepsis (39.8%, 95% CI 34.5% to 45.2%) and undernutrition (n=92, 27.3%, 95% CI 22.7% to 32.4%) were most common causes of death among cases with antecedent hospitalisations. The greatest proportion of deaths with antecedent hospital admissions occurred among cases aged 1-11 months (48.0%, 95% CI 44.4% to 51.7%), compared with those aged 0-1 months (21.7%, 95% CI 18.8% to 24.9%) and those aged 1-5 years (30.3%, 95% CI 27.0% to 33.8%). Moreover, the greatest proportion of deaths with antecedent hospital admissions occurred among infants/children with weight-for-age Z-score of < -3 (62.5%, 95% CI 56.5% to 68.0%) compared with those with weight-for-age Z-score of ≥-3 (37.5%, 95% CI 32.0% to 43.5%).

CONCLUSIONS: We observed a high proportion of deaths with antecedent hospitalisations within 180 days among young children across eight sites in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Among those deaths, children aged 1-11 months and undernourished infants were over-represented, suggesting early follow-up as a potential point to focus targeted support and future research.

Volume

16

Issue

3

First Page

106095

Last Page

106095

ISSN

2044-6055

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

41877327

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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