In primary care, identifying pneumonia events in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may be challenging due to similarities in symptoms with COPD exacerbations and lack of diagnostic testing. This study explored the accuracy of pneumonia diagnosis coded in primary care by comparing diagnosis in primary care with diagnosis in hospital.
Featured article: Accuracy of the recording of pneumonia events in English electronic healthcare record data in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Which children still die from pneumonia
Edited by:
Grant Austin Mackenzie: Medical Research Council, Gambia
Submission Status: Open until 30 June 2024
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Long-term effects of pneumonia in young children
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The definition and classification of pneumonia
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The radiological diagnosis of pneumonia in children
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Aims and scope
Pneumonia is the only journal to focus exclusively on pneumonia. Publishing original research, case reports, reviews, commentaries and correspondence, Pneumonia provides an international forum for the exchange of knowledge by scientists and clinicians involved in studying the etiology and pathogenesis of pneumonia, as well as its diagnosis, epidemiology, treatment and prevention. The journal's scope extends to research on lung infections and diagnosis, inflammation and immunity, microbial pathogenesis and viral-bacterial interactions.
Cutting-edge research, insightful reviews and dedication to the community make Pneumonia an essential resource for clinicians, researchers, respirologists and allied professionals involved with infectious diseases.
Pneumonia archive
Pneumonia transferred to BioMed Central from Griffith University ePress in January 2016.
The archive of the journal has been transferred to a new platform and all articles previously published in the journal can be accessed here.
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Editors' profiles
Giovanni Sotgiu
Prof Giovanni Sotgiu, MD, PhD, FERS, is full Professor of Medical Statistics – University of Sassari, Italy. He got two medical specializations in Infectious Diseases and in Medical Statistics and a PhD in Methodology of Clinical Trials. He is dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery– University of Sassari, Italy. His research activity is focused on medical statistics, epidemiology and prevention of infectious and non-infectious diseases, hospital and environmental hygiene, health education.
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