AUTHOR=Bøås Håkon , Bekkevold Terese , Havdal Lise Beier , Kran Anne-Marte Bakken , Rojahn Astrid Elisabeth , Størdal Ketil , Debes Sara , Døllner Henrik , Nordbø Svein Arne , Barstad Bjørn , Haarr Elisebet , Vázquez Fernández Liliana , Nakstad Britt , Leegaard Truls Michael , Hungnes Olav , Flem Elmira , Norwegian Enhanced Pediatric Immunisation Surveillance (NorEPIS) Network , Bøås Håkon , Bekkevold Terese , Fernández Liliana Vázquez , Hungnes Olav , Kran Anne-Marte Bakken , Flem Elmira , Havdal Lise Beier , Inchley Christopher , Leegaard Truls Michael , Nakstad Britt , Rojahn Astrid Elisabeth , Størdal Ketil , Debes Sara , Døllner Henrik , Nordbø Svein Arne , Barstad Bjørn , Haarr Elisebet TITLE=The burden of hospital-attended influenza in Norwegian children JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pediatrics VOLUME=10 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pediatrics/articles/10.3389/fped.2022.963274 DOI=10.3389/fped.2022.963274 ISSN=2296-2360 ABSTRACT=Background

Norwegian health authorities do not recommend universal pediatric vaccination against seasonal influenza. We aimed to estimate the incidence of influenza by age and underlying medical conditions in hospitalized Norwegian children aged <18 years.

Methods

Active surveillance for influenza in children <18 years was implemented in five hospitals during 2015–18. Children with respiratory symptoms and/or fever were prospectively enrolled and tested for influenza. Surveillance data were linked to health registry data to estimate the national burden of influenza in hospitals.

Results

In 309 (10%) out of 3,010 hospital contacts, the child tested positive for influenza, corresponding to an average incidence of 0.96 hospital-attended influenza cases per 1,000 children <18 years of age. Children <1 year of age (3.8 per 1,000 children) and children with underlying medical conditions (17 per 1,000 children with bronchopulmonary dysplasia) had the highest average incidence. Among <1 year old children, 3% tested positive for influenza, compared to 25% for children aged 6–17. Few children were vaccinated against influenza.

Conclusions

Children <1 year of age and children with underlying medical conditions had a higher incidence of influenza requiring hospital treatment compared to the general population. Effective interventions against seasonal influenza for children in Norway should be considered.