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Volume 19, Number 1—January 2013
CME ACTIVITY - Research

Staphylococcal Infections in Children, California, USA, 1985–2009

Kathleen GutierrezComments to Author , Meira S. Halpern, Clea Sarnquist, Shila Soni1, Anna Chen Arroyo, and Yvonne Maldonado
Author affiliations: Author affiliations: Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA

Main Article

Table 1

Incidence of and length of stay for hospitalized children with staphylococcal infections, California, USA, 1985–2009*

Sociodemographic variable and infection category % Total population of children, N = 140,265 Incidence of children hospitalized among
LOS, d, median (IQR) % Children who died†
General population, per 100,000 children Hospitalized children, per 1,000 children
Overall
100
62
14
7 (4–21)
2.5
Sex

M

57 69 15 7 (4–21) 2.5

F


43
56
14
7 (4–21)
2.6
Race

White

37 60 13 7 (3–18) 2.3

Black

10 88 16 8 (4–25) 2.9

Hispanic

42 63 15 7 (4–21) 2.4

Asian


6
40
13
7 (4–21)
2.9
Age at admission

<30 d (neonates)

25 452‡ 8 28 (7–69) 4.5

31–91 d

6 21 7 (4–17) 3.2

92–365 d

12 21 6 (3–13) 2.3

1–2 y

15 83 22 5 (3–10) 1.5

3–5 y

9 34 17 6 (3–13) 1.5

6–9 y

9 26 17 6 (3–13) 1.5

10–13 y

10 28 19 7 (4–14) 1.6

14–17 y


14
40
16
6 (3–14)
2.0
Expected source of payment

Private insurance

41 NA 12 7 (3–20) 2.4

Other§


59
NA
16
8 (4–21)
2.6
Staphylococcal infection category

Uncomplicated¶

72 45 10 6 (3–14) 1.3

Pneumonia only

6 4 1 14 (7–37) 5.7

Septicemia only

20 12 3 14 (6–45) 5.5

Complicated#

2 1 <0.5 38 (16–92) 7.3

*LOS, length of stay; IQR, interquartile range; NA, not applicable.
†For differences >0.2% in the proportion of children that died, p<0.0001 (χ2 test); p = 0.04 for the differences in the proportion of deaths for Hispanic vs. White children.
‡Combined value for all children <1 year of age.
§Medi-Cal, Medicare, other government sources, charity, and none.
¶No code for septicemia or pneumonia identified.
#>2 staphylococcal codes identified, including >1 code for septicemia or pneumonia.

Main Article

1Current affiliation: Foodia, San Francisco, California, USA.

Page created: December 18, 2012
Page updated: December 18, 2012
Page reviewed: December 18, 2012
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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