High rates of suppurative otitis media among children attending urban clinics in Goroka, Eastern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea: a cross-sectional study
Celestine Aho, Tamara Veselinović, Rita Mark, Philip Teine, Tola Goina, Moses Laman, Rebecca L. Ford, Casparia Mond, William Pomat, Christopher G. Brennan-Jones, Michael J. Binks, Deborah Lehmann

TL;DR
This study found high rates of ear infections in young children in Papua New Guinea, especially those under two years old, highlighting the need for urgent public health action.
Contribution
The study provides new data on the high prevalence of suppurative otitis media in children in the PNG highlands.
Findings
79% of children under six months had otitis media.
45.4% of 1–2-year-olds had suppurative otitis media.
Maternal smoking and recent antibiotic use were associated with increased risk of otitis media.
Abstract
Otitis media (OM) is the leading cause of childhood hearing loss but its burden in low-middle-income countries like Papua New Guinea (PNG) is poorly understood. We aimed to determine the proportion of children aged ≤15 years attending clinics in Goroka, Eastern Highlands Province, PNG with OM and associated risk factors. In 2021–2022 any child attending outpatient clinics because they were sick or for ear screening or immunisation and accompanying siblings were eligible for enrolment into this cross-sectional study. Clinical and risk factor data were collected, ears examined by trained research nurses using otoscopy and tympanometry and findings independently reviewed by Australia-based audiologists. A child-level diagnosis was made based on the worst affected ear. Of 498 enrolled children, 68.1% attended for treatment, 15.3% for immunisation, 1.2% for ear screening and 15.5% were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEar Surgery and Otitis Media · Bacterial Infections and Vaccines · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
