Community-Acquired Pneumonia Requiring Hospitalization among U.S. Children. Jain, S., Williams, D. J., Arnold, S. R., Ampofo, K., Bramley, A. M., Reed, C., Stockmann, C., Anderson, E. J., Grijalva, C. G., Self, W. H., Zhu, Y., Patel, A., Hymas, W., Chappell, J. D., Kaufman, R. A., Kan, J. H., Dansie, D., Lenny, N., Hillyard, D. R., Haynes, L. M., Levine, M., Lindstrom, S., Winchell, J. M., Katz, J. M., Erdman, D., Schneider, E., Hicks, L. A., Wunderink, R. G., Edwards, K. M., Pavia, A. T., McCullers, J. A., & Finelli, L. New England Journal of Medicine, 372(9):835–845, February, 2015.
Community-Acquired Pneumonia Requiring Hospitalization among U.S. Children [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Pneumonia is a leading cause of hospitalization among children in the United States,1–3 with medical costs estimated at almost $1 billion in 2009.4 Despite this large burden of disease, critical gaps remain in our knowledge about pneumonia in children.5 Contemporary estimates of the incidence and microbiologic causes of hospitalization for community-acquired pneumonia among children in the United States would be of value.5 Most recent published estimates of the incidence of pneumonia have used administrative data, which are limited because a strict clinical and radiographic definition of community-acquired pneumonia is difficult to apply to such data and because diagnostic testing . . .
@article{jain_community-acquired_2015,
	title = {Community-{Acquired} {Pneumonia} {Requiring} {Hospitalization} among {U}.{S}. {Children}},
	volume = {372},
	issn = {0028-4793},
	url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1405870},
	doi = {10.1056/NEJMoa1405870},
	abstract = {Pneumonia is a leading cause of hospitalization among children in the United States,1–3 with medical costs estimated at almost \$1 billion in 2009.4 Despite this large burden of disease, critical gaps remain in our knowledge about pneumonia in children.5 Contemporary estimates of the incidence and microbiologic causes of hospitalization for community-acquired pneumonia among children in the United States would be of value.5 Most recent published estimates of the incidence of pneumonia have used administrative data, which are limited because a strict clinical and radiographic definition of community-acquired pneumonia is difficult to apply to such data and because diagnostic testing . . .},
	number = {9},
	urldate = {2015-03-11},
	journal = {New England Journal of Medicine},
	author = {Jain, Seema and Williams, Derek J. and Arnold, Sandra R. and Ampofo, Krow and Bramley, Anna M. and Reed, Carrie and Stockmann, Chris and Anderson, Evan J. and Grijalva, Carlos G. and Self, Wesley H. and Zhu, Yuwei and Patel, Anami and Hymas, Weston and Chappell, James D. and Kaufman, Robert A. and Kan, J. Herman and Dansie, David and Lenny, Noel and Hillyard, David R. and Haynes, Lia M. and Levine, Min and Lindstrom, Stephen and Winchell, Jonas M. and Katz, Jacqueline M. and Erdman, Dean and Schneider, Eileen and Hicks, Lauri A. and Wunderink, Richard G. and Edwards, Kathryn M. and Pavia, Andrew T. and McCullers, Jonathan A. and Finelli, Lyn},
	month = feb,
	year = {2015},
	pmid = {25714161},
	pages = {835--845},
}

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