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Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary

Sudden unexpected death in infancy (SUDI) remains a global concern and is a particular burden in South Africa. Infections have been previously linked to SUDI deaths, but empirical data in a South African context is lacking. This study aimed to explore the burden and risk factors of infection-related...

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Main Author: Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
Other Authors: Heathfield, Laura
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
author2 Heathfield, Laura
author_browse Heathfield, Laura
Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
author_facet Heathfield, Laura
Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
author_sort Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
collection Thesis
description Sudden unexpected death in infancy (SUDI) remains a global concern and is a particular burden in South Africa. Infections have been previously linked to SUDI deaths, but empirical data in a South African context is lacking. This study aimed to explore the burden and risk factors of infection-related infant death at Salt River Mortuary (SRM). To identify the types of infections associated with SUDI in a local setting, medico-legal files from SRM between 1 January 2017 and 31 December 2018 were reviewed. Included cases involved infants between 1 day and 365 days old where an infectious cause of death was either suspected or confirmed (n=288). Variables pertaining to cause of death, scope of post-mortem investigation, clinical history and risk factors were collected from case files and assessed. Most infants (73.6%) demised within four months of age. The major modifiable risk factors were cosleeping (95.0%, n=264/278), side or prone sleeping position of the infant (73.3%, n=195/266), as well as tobacco smoke exposure (46.9%, n=122/260). Respiratory infection was the leading cause of death in this population, followed by gastroenteritis. Philippi area recorded the most gastroenteritis and respiratory infection-related deaths at 25.0% (n= 8/32) and 23.4% (n= 45/192), respectively. Milnerton and Gugulethu recorded 18.8% (n=6/32) and 15.6% (n=5/32) of gastroenteritis-related deaths, respectively. Nyanga and Mitchells Plain recorded 11.5% (n= 22/192) and 9.9% (n=19/192) of respiratory infection-related deaths, respectively. Despite infections being diagnosed as cause of death, microbial analysis was only requested in 22.9% (n= 66/288) and histology was only performed in 14.9% (n= 43/288) of the cases. Where microbial analyses were requested, Staphylococcus aureus bacteria was the most common organism found, followed by Cytomegalovirus. However, due to the small numbers of microbial analyses, geographical hotspots could not be identified at the pathogen level. There is therefore a need to adopt a standard protocol for the investigation of SUDI to optimise the translation of mortality data into targeted public health interventions. The promotion of awareness in at-risk areas should be harnessed in a local context to develop preventive strategies and ultimately reduce infant death.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:47.627Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37517 Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia Heathfield, Laura forensic science Sudden unexpected death in infancy (SUDI) remains a global concern and is a particular burden in South Africa. Infections have been previously linked to SUDI deaths, but empirical data in a South African context is lacking. This study aimed to explore the burden and risk factors of infection-related infant death at Salt River Mortuary (SRM). To identify the types of infections associated with SUDI in a local setting, medico-legal files from SRM between 1 January 2017 and 31 December 2018 were reviewed. Included cases involved infants between 1 day and 365 days old where an infectious cause of death was either suspected or confirmed (n=288). Variables pertaining to cause of death, scope of post-mortem investigation, clinical history and risk factors were collected from case files and assessed. Most infants (73.6%) demised within four months of age. The major modifiable risk factors were cosleeping (95.0%, n=264/278), side or prone sleeping position of the infant (73.3%, n=195/266), as well as tobacco smoke exposure (46.9%, n=122/260). Respiratory infection was the leading cause of death in this population, followed by gastroenteritis. Philippi area recorded the most gastroenteritis and respiratory infection-related deaths at 25.0% (n= 8/32) and 23.4% (n= 45/192), respectively. Milnerton and Gugulethu recorded 18.8% (n=6/32) and 15.6% (n=5/32) of gastroenteritis-related deaths, respectively. Nyanga and Mitchells Plain recorded 11.5% (n= 22/192) and 9.9% (n=19/192) of respiratory infection-related deaths, respectively. Despite infections being diagnosed as cause of death, microbial analysis was only requested in 22.9% (n= 66/288) and histology was only performed in 14.9% (n= 43/288) of the cases. Where microbial analyses were requested, Staphylococcus aureus bacteria was the most common organism found, followed by Cytomegalovirus. However, due to the small numbers of microbial analyses, geographical hotspots could not be identified at the pathogen level. There is therefore a need to adopt a standard protocol for the investigation of SUDI to optimise the translation of mortality data into targeted public health interventions. The promotion of awareness in at-risk areas should be harnessed in a local context to develop preventive strategies and ultimately reduce infant death. 2023-03-24T06:57:54Z 2023-03-24T06:57:54Z 2022 2023-03-24T06:57:34Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37517 eng application/pdf Department of Clinical Laboratory Sciences Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle forensic science
Matlebjane, Sefule Anastacia
Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
title_full Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
title_fullStr Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
title_full_unstemmed Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
title_short Retrospective analysis of infection-related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at Salt River Mortuary
title_sort retrospective analysis of infection related deaths of sudden unexpected death in infancy cases at salt river mortuary
topic forensic science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37517
work_keys_str_mv AT matlebjanesefuleanastacia retrospectiveanalysisofinfectionrelateddeathsofsuddenunexpecteddeathininfancycasesatsaltrivermortuary