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Dive into the research topics where Caroline B. Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline B. Hall.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

The burden of respiratory syncytial virus infection in young children.

Caroline B. Hall; Geoffrey A. Weinberg; Marika K. Iwane; Aaron K. Blumkin; Kathryn M. Edwards; Mary Allen Staat; Peggy Auinger; Marie R. Griffin; Katherine A. Poehling; Dean D. Erdman; Carlos G. Grijalva; Yuwei Zhu; Peter G. Szilagyi

BACKGROUND The primary role of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in causing infant hospitalizations is well recognized, but the total burden of RSV infection among young children remains poorly defined. METHODS We conducted prospective, population-based surveillance of acute respiratory infections among children under 5 years of age in three U.S. counties. We enrolled hospitalized children from 2000 through 2004 and children presenting as outpatients in emergency departments and pediatric offices from 2002 through 2004. RSV was detected by culture and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Clinical information was obtained from parents and medical records. We calculated population-based rates of hospitalization associated with RSV infection and estimated the rates of RSV-associated outpatient visits. RESULTS Among 5067 children enrolled in the study, 919 (18%) had RSV infections. Overall, RSV was associated with 20% of hospitalizations, 18% of emergency department visits, and 15% of office visits for acute respiratory infections from November through April. Average annual hospitalization rates were 17 per 1000 children under 6 months of age and 3 per 1000 children under 5 years of age. Most of the children had no coexisting illnesses. Only prematurity and a young age were independent risk factors for hospitalization. Estimated rates of RSV-associated office visits among children under 5 years of age were three times those in emergency departments. Outpatients had moderately severe RSV-associated illness, but few of the illnesses (3%) were diagnosed as being caused by RSV. CONCLUSIONS RSV infection is associated with substantial morbidity in U.S. children in both inpatient and outpatient settings. Most children with RSV infection were previously healthy, suggesting that control strategies targeting only high-risk children will have a limited effect on the total disease burden of RSV infection.


Pediatrics | 2006

Diagnosis and Management of Bronchiolitis

Allan S. Lieberthal; Howard Bauchner; Caroline B. Hall; David W. Johnson; Uma R. Kotagal; Michael Light; Wilbert H. Mason; H. Cody Meissner; Kieran J. Phelan; Joseph J. Zorc; Mark A. Brown; Richard D. Clover; Ian Nathanson; Matti Korppi; Richard N. Shiffman; Danette Stanko-Lopp; Caryn Davidson

Bronchiolitis is a disorder most commonly caused in infants by viral lower respiratory tract infection. It is the most common lower respiratory infection in this age group. It is characterized by acute inflammation, edema, and necrosis of epithelial cells lining small airways, increased mucus production, and bronchospasm. The American Academy of Pediatrics convened a committee composed of primary care physicians and specialists in the fields of pulmonology, infectious disease, emergency medicine, epidemiology, and medical informatics. The committee partnered with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the RTI International-University of North Carolina Evidence-Based Practice Center to develop a comprehensive review of the evidence-based literature related to the diagnosis, management, and prevention of bronchiolitis. The resulting evidence report and other sources of data were used to formulate clinical practice guideline recommendations. This guideline addresses the diagnosis of bronchiolitis as well as various therapeutic interventions including bronchodilators, corticosteroids, antiviral and antibacterial agents, hydration, chest physiotherapy, and oxygen. Recommendations are made for prevention of respiratory syncytial virus infection with palivizumab and the control of nosocomial spread of infection. Decisions were made on the basis of a systematic grading of the quality of evidence and strength of recommendation. The clinical practice guideline underwent comprehensive peer review before it was approved by the American Academy of Pediatrics. This clinical practice guideline is not intended as a sole source of guidance in the management of children with bronchiolitis. Rather, it is intended to assist clinicians in decision-making. It is not intended to replace clinical judgment or establish a protocol for the care of all children with this condition. These recommendations may not provide the only appropriate approach to the management of children with bronchiolitis.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Respiratory Syncytial Viral Infection in Children with Compromised Immune Function

Caroline B. Hall; Keith R. Powell; Noni MacDonald; Christine L. Gala; Marilyn E. Menegus; Stephen C. Suffin; Harvey J. Cohen

For 10 winters, 608 children five years old or younger who were hospitalized with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection were prospectively studied to evaluate the relation between their immune status and the severity of their infection. Forty-seven had been immunocompromised by chemotherapy, steroid therapy, or a primary immunodeficiency disorder. Among the immunocompromised children, those receiving chemotherapy for cancer and those with immunodeficiency disease had more severe RSV disease, with pneumonia occurring at all ages, and a higher mortality rate. Children receiving long-term steroid therapy did not appear to have more severe clinical manifestations than normal children. Viral shedding, however, was significantly greater and more prolonged in the children receiving steroid therapy, and particularly in those receiving chemotherapy or with an immunodeficiency disease. Giant-cell pneumonia was documented in one child with leukemia. Over half the immunocompromised children acquired the RSV infection nosocomially. These findings indicate that children receiving chemotherapy for cancer and those with immunodeficiency disease are at risk for complicated or fatal infections from RSV and should be considered for antiviral and other therapies as they become available. Efforts should also be made to protect compromised children if hospitalization cannot be avoided.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982

Respiratory Syncytial Viral Infection in Infants with Congenital Heart Disease

Noni MacDonald; Caroline B. Hall; Stephen C. Suffin; Chloe G. Alexson; Peter Harris; James A. Manning

Occasional reports have suggested that infants with congenital heart disease may have an increased risk of severe illness from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. We prospectively studied 699 infants hospitalized during the winters of 1976 through 1980, when RSV was prevalent in the community; 229 of these infants had proved RSV infections acquired either before admission or during hospitalization; 27 had both congenital heart disease and RSV infection, and 46 had congenital heart disease without RSV infection. Infected infants with congenital heart disease had significantly more severe illness than those without congenital heart disease, as judged by the requirement for intensive care and assisted ventilation and by the mortality rate (37 per cent vs. 1.5 per cent, P less than 0.01). The infection was acquired nosocomially by 21 per cent of infected infants; the mortality rate from nosocomial infection was also higher in infants with congenital heart disease (44 per cent vs. 5 per cent, P less than 0.01). Pulmonary hypertension was the one condition particularly associated with severe RSV illness. Eight of the 11 infants (73 per cent) with congenital heart disease and pulmonary hypertension died during their RSV illness. The courses in infants with congenital heart disease with and without RSV infection were also compared. Their ages, types of cardiac lesions, and incidence of pulmonary hypertension were similar, but the infants with RSV infection had a higher mortality rate (37 per cent vs. 6.5 per cent, P less than 0.1).


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

Human Herpesvirus-6 Infection in Children -- A Prospective Study of Complications and Reactivation

Caroline B. Hall; Christine E. Long; Kenneth C. Schnabel; Mary T. Caserta; Kim McIntyre; Maria Costanzo; Anne M. Knott; Stephen Dewhurst; Richard A. Insel; Leon G. Epstein

BACKGROUND Infection with human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) is nearly universal in infancy or early childhood. However, the course of this infection, its complications, and its potential for persistence or reactivation remain unclear. METHODS We studied infants and children under the age of three years who presented to our emergency department with acute illnesses. Infants and young children without acute illness were studied as controls. HHV-6 infection was identified by blood-mononuclear-cell culture, serologic testing, and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS No primary HHV-6 infection was found among 582 infants and young children with acute nonfebrile illnesses or among 352 controls without acute illness. Of 1653 infants and young children with acute febrile illnesses, 160 (9.7 percent) had primary HHV-6 infection, as documented by viremia and seroconversion. They ranged in age from 2 weeks to 25 months; 23 percent were under the age of 6 months. HHV-6 infections accounted for 20 percent of 365 visits to the emergency department for febrile illnesses among children 6 to 12 months old. Of the 160 infants and young children with acute HHV-6 infections, 21 (13 percent) were hospitalized, and 21 had seizures. Often the seizures appeared late and were prolonged or recurrent. HHV-6 infections accounted for one third of all febrile seizures in children up to the age of two years. In follow-up studies over a period of one to two years, the HHV-6 genome persisted in blood mononuclear cells after primary infection in 37 of 56 children (66 percent). Reactivation, sometimes with febrile illnesses, was suggested by subsequent increases in antibody titers in 16 percent (30 of 187) and by PCR in 6 percent (17 of 278). No recurrent viremia was detected. Of 41 healthy newborns studied, 12 (29 percent) had the HHV-6 genome in their blood mononuclear cells; nevertheless, 6 of these newborns subsequently had primary HHV-6 infections. CONCLUSIONS In infants and young children HHV-6 infection is a major cause of visits to the emergency department, febrile seizures, and hospitalizations. Perinatal transmission may occur, with possible asymptomatic, transient, or persistent neonatal infection.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Aerosolized Ribavirin Treatment of Infants with Respiratory Syncytial Viral Infection: A Randomized Double-Blind Study

Caroline B. Hall; John T. McBride; Edward E. Walsh; David M. Bell; Christine L. Gala; Stephen W. Hildreth; Lawrence G. Ten Eyck; William J. Hall

We evaluated a new antiviral agent, ribavirin, in the treatment of infants hospitalized with lower-respiratory-tract disease from respiratory syncytial virus. Ribavirin or placebo was administered to 33 infants in a double-blind manner by continuous aerosol for three to six days. Seventeen infants were treated with placebo, and 16 with ribavirin. By the end of treatment, infants receiving ribavirin had significantly greater improvement in their overall score for severity of illness, in lower-respiratory-tract signs, and in arterial oxygen saturation. Viral shedding was also diminished in the treated groups as compared with the placebo group. No side effects or toxicity were associated with the aerosol therapy. Isolates of respiratory syncytial virus obtained from the infants over the course of therapy showed no change in sensitivity to ribavirin.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003

Transmission of Influenza: Implications for Control in Health Care Settings

Robert A. Weinstein; Carolyn B. Bridges; Matthew J. Kuehnert; Caroline B. Hall

Annual influenza epidemics in the United States result in an average of >36,000 deaths and 114,000 hospitalizations. Influenza can spread rapidly to patients and health care personnel in health care settings after influenza is introduced by visitors, staff, or patients. Influenza outbreaks in health care facilities can have potentially devastating consequences, particularly for immunocompromised persons. Although vaccination of health care personnel and patients is the primary means to prevent and control outbreaks of influenza in health care settings, antiviral influenza medications and isolation precautions are important adjuncts. Although droplet transmission is thought to be the primary mode of influenza transmission, limited evidence is available to support the relative clinical importance of contact, droplet, and droplet nuclei (airborne) transmission of influenza. In this article, the results of studies on the modes of influenza transmission and their relevant isolation precautions are reviewed.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

Norovirus and Medically Attended Gastroenteritis in U.S. Children

Daniel C. Payne; Jan Vinjé; Peter G. Szilagyi; Kathryn M. Edwards; Mary Allen Staat; Geoffrey A. Weinberg; Caroline B. Hall; James D. Chappell; David I. Bernstein; Aaron T. Curns; Mary E. Wikswo; S. Hannah Shirley; Aron J. Hall; Benjamin A. Lopman; Umesh D. Parashar

BACKGROUND Cases of rotavirus-associated acute gastroenteritis have declined since the introduction of rotavirus vaccines, but the burden of norovirus-associated acute gastroenteritis in children remains to be assessed. METHODS We conducted active surveillance for laboratory-confirmed cases of norovirus among children younger than 5 years of age with acute gastroenteritis in hospitals, emergency departments, and outpatient clinical settings. The children resided in one of three U.S. counties during the years 2009 and 2010. Fecal specimens were tested for norovirus and rotavirus. We calculated population-based rates of norovirus-associated acute gastroenteritis and reviewed billing records to determine medical costs; these data were extrapolated to the U.S. population of children younger than 5 years of age. RESULTS Norovirus was detected in 21% of young children (278 of 1295) seeking medical attention for acute gastroenteritis in 2009 and 2010, with norovirus detected in 22% (165 of 742) in 2009 and 20% (113 of 553) in 2010 (P=0.43). The virus was also detected in 4% of healthy controls (19 of 493) in 2009. Rotavirus was identified in 12% of children with acute gastroenteritis (152 of 1295) in 2009 and 2010. The respective rates of hospitalization, emergency department visits, and outpatient visits for the norovirus were 8.6, 146.7, and 367.7 per 10,000 children younger than 5 years of age in 2009 and 5.8, 134.3, and 260.1 per 10,000 in 2010, with an estimated cost per episode of


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1976

Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections within Families

Caroline B. Hall; Joyce M. Geiman; Robert J. Biggar; David I. Kotok; Patricia M. Hogan; R. Gordon Douglas

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The New England Journal of Medicine | 1992

Primary human herpesvirus 6 infection in young children.

Prasong Pruksananonda; Caroline B. Hall; Richard A. Insel; Kim McIntyre; Philip E. Pellett; Christine E. Long; Kenneth C. Schnabel; Patricia H. Pincus; Felicia R. Stamey; Timothy R. Dambaugh; John A. Stewart

435, and

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Marie R. Griffin

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Mary Allen Staat

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Marika K. Iwane

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Yuwei Zhu

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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