Rapid infectious disease shifts

Rapid infectious disease shifts in Chinese children and adolescents prior to covid-19

Research at a Glance:

  • Deaths of children and adolescents in China due to infectious diseases were becoming rare in the pre-COVID-19 era, with 0.07 deaths per 100 000 people in 2017
  • Quarantinable conditions with high death rates had effectively disappeared
  • Between 2008 and 2018 leading causes of infectious disease deaths shifted from rabies and tuberculosis to HIV/AIDS
  • Most common infections in early childhood were vaccine-preventable diseases and gastrointestinal and enteroviral diseases. Sexually transmitted diseases and bloodborne infections largely occurred in older adolescents

Deaths of children and adolescents in China due to infectious diseases were becoming rare prior to the covid-19 pandemic, according to a new study.

Quarantinable conditions with high death rates such as cholera and plague had effectively disappeared and many traditional and vaccine-preventable infectious diseases of childhood including diarrhoea, measles and rubella became uncommon.

The research, led by the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI), Center for Adolescent Heath (CAH) and Peking University and published in the British Medical Journal, found the leading causes of death from infectious diseases in China had shifted markedly over a 10 year period from rabies and tuberculosis to HIV/AIDS.

But overall deaths from infectious diseases decreased steadily between 2008-2018 from 0.21 per 100 000 population in 2008 to 0.07 per 100 000 in 2017.

MCRI-CAH Professor George Patton said until now no study had reported on recent trends in infectious diseases among children and adolescents in China.

The new research analysed national surveillance data across 31 mainland Chinese provinces. It involved 5 million students aged six to 22 years, and involved 44 notifiable infectious diseases.

Study author Yanhui Dong, from Peking University, said China had made ‘remarkable progress’ in infectious disease control in this age group.

But Dr Dong said while animal-to-human infections like bird flu remained low, the potential for major outbreaks like SARS-CoV-2 remained a very real possibility.

After the SARS outbreak in 2003, China made substantial investments in laboratory testing, surveillance system enhancement, national intervention programs for specific diseases, and collaboration with international partners.

Professor Patton said despite the progress, China faced new challenges in responding to seasonal and unpredictable new infectious diseases in children and adolescents.

Comprehensive national surveillance systems and rapid proactive government responses would be an integral part of future infectious disease control in China and around the world, he said.

“China will need to continue its successful efforts against older infectious diseases of children and adolescents, including measles, tuberculosis, rabies, and scarlet fever and now scale-up vaccination for mumps, seasonal influenza, and hepatitis B,” Professor Patton said.

“Along with the rest of the world, China will also need greater vigilance around the highly transmissible seasonal and unpredictable diseases that we have seen in the past two decades including SARS, MERS, novel influenzas, Zika, Ebola and now the new SARS-CoV-2 virus.”

Despite expanding the national childhood immunisation program in 2008, the most common infections in early childhood in China were still vaccine preventable diseases and gastrointestinal and enterovirus diseases, such as hand, foot and mouth disease.

Sexually transmitted diseases and bloodborne infections largely affected older adolescents.

Dr Dong said the significant increase of HIV/AIDs and STI’s among 15-24 year olds seemed related to high risk sexual behaviours and poor awareness of infection risks.

“There is a pressing need for more school and university-based sex education programs as well as peer education, and access to rapid testing for sexually transmitted infections,” Dr Dong said.

Researchers from the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, the University of Melbourne and The Royal Children’s Hospital also contributed to the study.

 

Publication: Yanhui Dong, Liping Wang, David P Burgner, Jessica E Miller, Yi Song, Xiang Ren,

Zhongjie Li, Yi Xing, Jun Ma, Susan M Sawyer and George C Patton. ‘Infectious diseases in children and adolescents in China: analysis of national surveillance data from 2008 to 2017,’ BMJ. DOI: 10.1136 bmj.m1043

 

Key findings for the six to 22 year age group in China included:

  • Deaths from infectious diseases has decreased between 2008-2018 from 0.21 per 100 000 population in 2008 to 0.07 per 100 000 in 2017
  • Quarantinable conditions with high death rates have effectively disappeared
  • Zoonotic infections like bird flu remained low but there is potential for major outbreaks
  • Notifiable infectious diseases decreased from 280 per 100 000 in 2008 to 162 per 100 000 in 2015, but rose again to 242 per 100 000 in 2017, largely related to mumps and seasonal influenza
  • Most vaccine preventable diseases were at low levels, but seasonal variation in mumps, rubella, measles, and influenza suggested these diseases should remain a priority for public policy
  • Vectorborne diseases, such as those transmitted by mosquitoes and fleas, have declined
  • Gastrointestinal and enterovirus diseases remained constant, but typhoid, paratyphoid, and dysentery continued to decline
  • Tuberculosis remained the most common bacterial infection, although cases of scarlet fever doubled between 2008 and 2017
  • Sexually transmitted diseases and bloodborne infections increased significantly. By the end of 2018, 149 000 people with newly diagnosed HIV/AIDS had been reported, 95 per cent of which were sexually transmitted. Of these, 16 000 new HIV/AIDS cases were reported among 15-24 year olds
  • Children and adolescents in western China continued to carry a disproportionate burden from infectious diseases

 

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