New Results from Landmark PERCH Study on Childhood Pneumonia
- Most causes of severe and very severe pneumonia are viral, and primary prevention policies should be adapted accordingly. However, pneumonia control policies need regional adaptation because there is substantial variation in the fraction of viruses and bacteria causing disease in different regions.
- Despite the predominance of viral pneumonia cases estimated by this study, almost all cases involved codetection of multiple pathogens, which could indicate coinfection with more than one pathogen. Sequential viral–bacterial coinfection has been identified elsewhere as a contributor to very severe pneumonia and pneumonia mortality and treatment practices should continue to consider this possibility.
- Pneumonia caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Pneumocystis jirovecii can be more common in dense urban settings and practices should tailor prevention and treatment strategies to these pathogens.
- Several factors increase the likelihood of death from pneumonia in children, especially malnutrition and HIV-infection or exposure.
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| Exchange visits for investigators and technicians—for example, between South Africa, The Gambia, and Kenya (shown here)—enabled learning and collaboration. (Photo: Maria Deloria Knoll) |
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More about PERCH
Learn about the study's seminal global results in an interactive microsite.
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Thanks to Generous Donors to the Johns Hopkins India Initiative, Neeta Accessed a Safe Hospital Delivery
Neeta, a 25-year-old woman who lives in a slum in Delhi, was pregnant and due for delivery in April 2021. The second wave of COVID-19 took everyone by surprise and the government announced a strict lockdown around her due date. Around the 20th of April, Neeta started experiencing labor pains. She went to a government hospital, but due to the alarming number of COVID cases, she was sent back home. Neeta’s husband took her to a private hospital, despite being a daily wage laborer and having limited funds. Read the full story.
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| A child gets vaccinated in Delhi (Source: Dr. Rajeev Seth, BUDS). |
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Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs Launches Comprehensive Global COVID Behavior Dashboard
 In a global survey last month, more than half of those who were unvaccinated in over 50 countries indicated they definitely or probably won’t get a COVID-19 vaccine. A new dashboard launched this month by the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs (CCP) unpacks the survey findings and helps explain why—and how experts can work to increase acceptance rates. The center is based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Full article about the dashboard here.
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