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Respiratory Syncytial Virus

Infection requiring hospitalization is higher in some Native American children

Published in TB and Outbreaks Week, October 29th, 2002

An epidemiological study has found higher rates of respiratory syncytial virus requiring hospitalization among certain groups of Native American children, but can't explain why.

According to researchers with Johns Hopkins University's Bloomberg School of Public Health, "The hospitalization rate for bronchiolitis of any cause among U.S. children younger than 1 year is estimated at 31.2 per 1000. No data exist on respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-specific hospitalization rates among high-risk Native Americans other than Alaska Natives, for whom the incidence of RSV hospitalization was estimated at 150 per 1000 among infants younger than 1 year."

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