Publication | Open Access
Epidemiology of Leishmaniasis in Spain Based on Hospitalization Records (1997–2008)
45
Citations
10
References
2011
Year
Hospitalization RecordsParasitic DiseaseEpidemiologySpanish Information SystemHospital DataParasitic ProtozoaAverage Hospitalization RateGlobal HealthClinical EpidemiologyInternational HealthPediatricsPublic HealthMedicineVisceral LeishmaniasisParasitologyHospital Medicine
All the records from the Spanish information system for hospital data of patients diagnosed with leishmaniasis during a 12-year period (1997-2008) were studied. The 2,028 individuals were hospitalized because of leishmaniasis, as indicated by the principal diagnostic code. The average hospitalization rate was 0.41/100,000 inhabitants. One-third of them were co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The incidence of hospitalization in the adult population with leishmaniasis co-infected with HIV increased with age, peaked at 35-39 years of age and subsequently declined. In the pediatric population, all leishmaniasis cases occurred in HIV-negative children. Incidence of hospitalizations was highest in Madrid and in the Mediterranean coast. The cost per inpatient hospital care was $9,601 corresponding to an annual direct cost of more than $1.5 million for inpatient care alone. The economical burden of leishmaniasis is not neglectable and in the 12-year study period it represented more than $19 million.
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