Factors associated with COVID-19 in children aged 0 to 15 in Niger, 2020
Habibatou Idé Amadou, Herman Yoda, Dieudonné Tialla, Pauline Kiswendsida Yanogo, Djibril Barry, Maman Laminou Ibrahim, Samaila Aboubacar, Abdoul Salam Youssoufou Souley, Abdoulaye Ousmane, Nicolas Meda

TL;DR
This study identifies factors linked to COVID-19 in children aged 0-15 in Niger, including sex, symptoms, and contact history.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into risk factors for COVID-19 in children in Niger using national data from 2020.
Findings
Male sex was associated with lower odds of testing positive for COVID-19.
Children with symptoms had higher odds of testing positive for the virus.
Having a notion of contact was associated with lower odds of testing positive.
Abstract
On January 30, 2020, the WHO declared COVID-19 a global health emergency. Children were affected in less severe forms. Niger had implemented measures in a context where children were a source of contamination. The aim was to determine the factors associated with COVID-19 in children in Niger from February to August 2020 through an analysis of the national database. We conducted an analytical cross-sectional study including all COVID-19 suspects in the database. We used Excel and Epi Info 7.2.4. software for data extraction and analysis. Frequencies and proportions were calculated, and in a logistic regression, we estimated the ORs of association with their 95% confidence intervals, the factors associated with COVID-19 at the threshold of p<0.05. Of 572 notified cases of suspected COVID-19 in children aged 0-15, 11.36% were positive. The median age of infected children was 10 years [IQR:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Impact on Reproduction · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · COVID-19 epidemiological studies
