| Literature DB >> 15030683 |
Ying-Hen Hsieh1, Cathy W S Chen, Sze-Bi Hsu.
Abstract
We studied the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak in Taiwan, using the daily case-reporting data from May 5 to June 4 to learn how it had spread so rapidly. Our results indicate that most SARS-infected persons had symptoms and were admitted before their infections were reclassified as probable cases. This finding could indicate efficient admission, slow reclassification process, or both. The high percentage of nosocomial infections in Taiwan suggests that infection from hospitalized patients with suspected, but not yet classified, cases is a major factor in the spread of disease. Delays in reclassification also contributed to the problem. Because accurate diagnostic testing for SARS is currently lacking, intervention measures aimed at more efficient diagnosis, isolation of suspected SARS patients, and reclassification procedures could greatly reduce the number of infections in future outbreaks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15030683 PMCID: PMC3322921 DOI: 10.3201/eid1002.030515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1The number of new probable cases in Taiwan by reporting date, May 5–June 4, 2003.
Figure 2Flow diagram for the model dynamics of the model proposed.
The model parameter values with 90% confidence interval (CI) and p values, when appropriatea
| Parameter | Estimated value | 90% CI | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| SARSb death rate | 0.0023 to 0.00101 | 0.0125 | |
| Discharge rate of probable case-patients | 0.000c to 0.1500 | <0.0001d | |
| Admission rate of suspected case-patients | 0.0814 to 0.5927 | 0.0336 | |
| Reclassification rate from suspected to probable case | 0.0281 to 0.1311 | 0.0142e | |
| Rule-out rate of suspected cases | 0.3571 to 0.5927 | - | |
| Proportion of probable cases in suspected class | - | - |
aAll rates are per day. bSARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome. cMax{0,-0.0046}. dp value for . ep value for .
Figure 3A, number of hospitalized suspected case-patients (Hn) computed from the model compared with real data from May 5 to June 4, 2003. B, number of reported probable case-patients (In) computed from the model compared with real data from May 5 to June 4. C, cumulative number of deaths due to severe acute respiratory syndrome (Dn) computed from the model compared with real data from May 5 to June 4.
Estimated intervals of epidemiologic importance for SARS outbreaks, Taiwan, May 5–June 4, 2003a
| Interval for: | Mean estimate (days) |
|---|---|
| Admission to reclassification as probable case-patient | 12.56 |
| Admission to removal from suspected case-patient category | 2.11 |
| Probable case classification to death | 24.31 |
| Probable case classification to discharge | 11.38 |
aSARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome.
Comparison of the estimated intervals from admission to death or discharge for SARS patients in Taiwan with those from Hong Kong studya
| Days | ||
|---|---|---|
| Interval for: | Taiwan | Hong Kong |
| Admission to designation as a probable case-patient to death | 36.87 | 35.9 |
| Admission to designation as a probable case-patient to discharge | 23.94 | 23.5 |
aBy Donnelly et al. (). SARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome.