Burden of chickenpox complications in Poland, 2006 to 2021: A comprehensive registry-based study

Author:

Halik Rafał1ORCID,Paradowska-Stankiewicz Iwona2ORCID,Trochonowicz Aneta1,Dittmer Swavik3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Health Monitoring and Analysis, National Institute of Public Health NIH—National Research Institute, Warsaw, Poland

2. Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Surveillance Department, Vaccine Preventable Diseases Unit, National Institute of Public Health NIH—National Research Institute, Warsaw, Poland

3. NHS National Services Scotland, Digital and Security, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background Chickenpox, a vaccine-preventable disease caused by the varicella zoster virus, generally presents with mild symptoms but can cause complications necessitating hospitalisation. In Poland, since 2009, vaccination has been obligatory for children up to 12 years of age who are particularly vulnerable to infection and for children in their vicinity. Aim To examine the burden of chickenpox complications and the trends of hospitalisation arising from these complications over time in the Polish population. Methods Data spanning 2006–21 were sourced from the Polish Infectious Diseases Surveillance System, the Nationwide General Hospital Morbidity Study and the Statistics Poland death registry. Standardised and age-specific incidence rates, hospital discharge rates and number of deaths because of chickenpox were calculated. Moreover, the joinpoint regression model was used to analyse trends of annual hospital discharge rates. Results Over the analysed timeframe, 25,804 hospitalisations and 52 deaths attributable to chickenpox complications were documented, and 1.0% of chickenpox cases required hospitalisation because of chickenpox. Age-standardised hospitalisation rates varied between 2.3 and 9.6 per 100,000 population. The analysis revealed no statistically significant trend in overall hospital discharge rates from chickenpox complications. However, a notable increase in hospitalisation rates was observed in children aged 0–4 and among inhabitants of rural areas, with annual percentage changes of 4.9% and 3.4% respectively. Conclusions Our findings suggest that the implementation of a universal chickenpox immunisation programme, supported by health education, should be considered to reduce the number of hospitalisations and nearly eliminate deaths because of chickenpox.

Publisher

European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC)

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1. Research roundup: March 2024;Journal of Health Visiting;2024-03-02

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