Norovirus in children under 2 years of age: an epidemiological study in Panama during the COVID-19 pandemic
Rodrigo DeAntonio, Morgan Hess-Holtz, Leyda Abrego, Zeuz Capitan-Barrios, Leyla Hernandez Donoso, Tirza De León, Xavier Sáez Llorens, Brechla Moreno, John Gerard Weil

TL;DR
This study examines norovirus-related acute gastroenteritis in young children in Panama during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Contribution
The study provides insights into norovirus incidence and prevalence in Panama amid pandemic-related disruptions to surveillance.
Findings
The overall AGE incidence was 11.6 episodes per 100 child-months.
Norovirus-related AGE incidence was 0.3 episodes per 100 child-months.
Norovirus prevalence was 4.6% in the longitudinal cohort and 6.8% in the hospital-based cohort.
Abstract
Norovirus infection is a common cause of acute gastroenteritis (AGE). Surveillance activities are important to aid investigation into effective norovirus control strategies, including vaccination. Here, we report ancillary findings related to the incidence, prevalence, and etiology of AGE caused by norovirus in Panama after adjustment of study methodology to comply with national coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mandates. In January 2020, children aged <2 years began enrolling into an epidemiological study in Panama to estimate the burden of norovirus in preparation for evaluating upcoming prevention strategies. This included an observational, longitudinal, community-based AGE surveillance study and a hospital-based AGE surveillance study. For the longitudinal study, healthy children aged 5–18 months were enrolled from January 6 through March 23, 2020, with a follow-up of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology · Respiratory viral infections research
