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Developing influenza and respiratory syncytial virus activity thresholds for syndromic surveillance in England
- Source :
- Epidemiology and Infection
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are common causes of respiratory tract infections and place a burden on health services each winter. Systems to describe the timing and intensity of such activity will improve the public health response and deployment of interventions to these pressures. Here we develop early warning and activity intensity thresholds for monitoring influenza and RSV using two novel data sources: general practitioner out-of-hours consultations (GP OOH) and telehealth calls (NHS 111). Moving Epidemic Method (MEM) thresholds were developed for winter 2017–2018. The NHS 111 cold/flu threshold was breached several weeks in advance of other systems. The NHS 111 RSV epidemic threshold was breached in week 41, in advance of RSV laboratory reporting. Combining the use of MEM thresholds with daily monitoring of NHS 111 and GP OOH syndromic surveillance systems provides the potential to alert to threshold breaches in real-time. An advantage of using thresholds across different health systems is the ability to capture a range of healthcare-seeking behaviour, which may reflect differences in disease severity. This study also provides a quantifiable measure of seasonal RSV activity, which contributes to our understanding of RSV activity in advance of the potential introduction of new RSV vaccines.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Epidemiology
respiratory syncytial virus
Psychological intervention
Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections
Telehealth
Virus
Influenza, Human
Health care
medicine
Humans
syndromic surveillance
Respiratory system
Referral and Consultation
Original Paper
Respiratory tract infections
business.industry
Public health
thresholds
Telemedicine
Influenza
Infectious Diseases
England
moving epidemic method
Emergency medicine
business
Sentinel Surveillance
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Epidemiology and Infection
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....034fa16a34185d0f38125bfeb2864d1e