Exposure to pollutants for household cooking and lighting and pediatric post-discharge mortality following a severe infection in Uganda
Gurvir S. Dhutt, Cherri Zhang, Elias Kumbakumba, Abner Tagoola, Peter Moschovis, Stephen Businge, Niranjan Kissoon, Nathan Kenya Mugisha, Jerome Kabakyenga, Matthew O. Wiens, Srijan Shrestha, Srijan Shrestha, Srijan Shrestha, Srijan Shrestha

TL;DR
This study examines if household air pollution from cooking and lighting affects child mortality six months after hospital discharge for severe infections in Uganda.
Contribution
The study investigates the link between household air pollution and post-discharge mortality in Ugandan children.
Findings
Unadjusted risk ratios showed higher mortality for children exposed to pollutant fuels for cooking and lighting.
After adjusting for factors like age and maternal education, the association was not statistically significant.
The study highlights the complex role of household air pollution in vulnerable populations.
Abstract
Particulate matter from household air pollution (HAP) is linked to half of all lower respiratory infection deaths among children under 5 years of age. In rural Uganda, similar number of children die 6-months post discharge as during hospitalization for severe infections. However, it is unclear whether exposure to HAP contributes to poor health and death after discharge. We investigated the association between cooking and household lighting practices and mortality 6-months post-discharge among children under 5 years of age treated for severe infection in rural Uganda. We conducted a secondary analysis of data from observational cohort studies, conducted between July 2017 to July 2021, among 6,955 children 0 to 5 years admitted to one of six Ugandan hospitals for a severe infectious illness. Clinical signs and symptoms, sociodemographic variables, and mortality up to 6-months…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnergy and Environment Impacts · Air Quality and Health Impacts · Climate Change and Health Impacts
