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Contribution of ethnicity, area level deprivation and air pollution to paediatric intensive care unit admissions in the United Kingdom 2008-2021

journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-23, 09:56 authored by Hannah Mitchell, Sarah Seaton, Christopher Leahy, Khurrum Mustafa, Hannah Buckley, Peter Davis, Richard Feltbower, Padmanabhan Ramanarayan

Background: There is emerging evidence on the impact of social and environmental determinants of health on paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions and outcomes. We analysed UK paediatric intensive care data to explore disparities in the incidence of admission according to a child’s ethnicity and the degree of deprivation and pollution in the child’s residential area.Methods: Data were extracted on children <16 years admitted to UK PICUs between 1st January 2008 and 31st December 2021 from the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network (PICANet) database. Ethnicity was categorised as White, Asian, Black, Mixed or Other. Deprivation was quantified using the ‘children in low-income families’ measure and outdoor air pollution was characterised using meanannual PM2.5 level at local authority level, both divided into population-weighted quintiles. UK population estimates were used to calculate crude incidence of PICU admission. Incidence rate ratios were calculated using Poisson regression models. Interpretation: There were 245,099 admissions, of which 60·7% were unplanned. After adjusting for age and sex, Asian and Black children had higher relative incidence of unplanned PICU admission compared to White (IRR 1·29 [95%CI: 1·25-1·33] and 1·50 [95%CI: 1·44-1·56] respectively), but there was no evidence of increased incidence of planned admission. Children living in the most deprived quintile had 1·50 times the incidence of admission in the least deprived quintile (95%CI: 1·46-1·54). There were higher crude admission levels of children living in the most polluted quintile compared to the least (157·8 vs 113·6 admissions per 100,000 child years), but after adjustment for ethnicity, deprivation, age and sex there was no association between pollution and PICU admission (IRR 1·00 [95%CI: 1·00-1·00] per 1g/m3 increase).Findings: Ethnicity and deprivation impact the incidence of PICU admission. When restricting to unplanned respiratory admissions and ventilated patients only, increasing pollution level was associated with increased incidence of PICU admission. To reduce these observed disparities, further work is needed to understand mechanisms behind these findings and how they relate to outcomes.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Population Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

EClinicalMedicine

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

2589-5370

eissn

2589-5370

Publisher DOI

Notes

Embargo till publication.

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Sarah Seaton

Deposit date

2024-07-23

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