A review of typhoid fever in South African black children

Abstract
Summary: Typhoid fever continues to escape swift diagnosis, even in an endemic country, and its multi-system nature led to delayed diagnosis in 25% of the patients in this study. This may have been an avoidable factor, leading to death in some patients through delay in instituting appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Neurological features and diarrhoea were particularly common in this paediatric population. Relative bradycardia has been shown to be a highly statistically significant finding for our group as a whole. Amoxycillin remains an effective and useful alternative to chloramphenicol. The mortality rate of 2.5% remains unchanged over the last 10 years. The relative inaccessibility to good primary health care, acceptable water supplies and sanitation that the black South African child encounters cannot be ruled out as a co-factor.