| Literature DB >> 19926697 |
Richard D Smith1, Marcus R Keogh-Brown, Tony Barnett, Joyce Tait.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To estimate the potential economic impact of pandemic influenza, associated behavioural responses, school closures, and vaccination on the United Kingdom.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19926697 PMCID: PMC2779854 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.b4571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Parameter assumptions and their sources used to estimate effects of pandemic influenza and possible responses to it
| Parameter | Estimates | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical attack rate | 25% (mild); 35% (moderate); 50% (high) | Department of Health (2007)4; Commission of the European Communities (2005)11; Health Protection Agency (2006)12 |
| Case fatality rate | 0.4% (low); 2.5% (high); 10% (extreme) | Department of Health (2008)13; Stadler et al (2003)14 |
| Duration of illness (working days) | 5 (low); 7 (high); 22 (extreme) | Commission of the European Communities (2005)11; Postma et al (2005)15; Peiris et al (2003)16; McLean et al (2005)17 |
| No of working days per year | 220 | Assumes 104 days are weekends, 8 days are bank holidays, and 33 days of annual leave or other absence |
| Pre-pandemic vaccine efficacy | 20% | Department of Health (2007)21 |
| Matched vaccine efficacy | 40% (single dose); 80% (double dose) | Leroux-Roels et al (2008)23 |
| School closure duration | 4 weeks | Based on duration of peak of pandemic, Department of Health (2007)4 |
| 14.25 weeks (95% of 15 week duration) | 15 weeks based on duration of pandemic, Department of Health (2007)4; 95% of duration based on Ferguson et al (2006)10 | |
| Percentage of parents needing to take time off work if schools were closed | 16.1% | Sadique et al (2008)33 |
| Percentage of parents with access to informal care | 54% | Sadique et al (2008)33 |
| Density of effective social networks | 300 people | Cheng et al (2004)34; Chombart de Lauwe et al (1953)35; Ko et al (2006)36 |
| Percentage of population willing to take prophylactic absence at the transition point | 34% | Sadique et al (2007)31 |
| Duration of prophylactic absence | 4 weeks | Based on limitations of annual leave and duration of peak pandemic, Department of Health (2007)4 |
| Transition point when prophylactic absence becomes widespread | When ≥1 death occurs in every social network* | See density of effective social networks |
| Mitigation impact of school closures | Reduction in clinical attack rate equivalent to 2% in a pandemic with 34% clinical attack rate | Ferguson et al (2006)10 |
| 15% reduction in CAR | Cauchemez et al (2009)30 |
*When mortality rate (clinical attack rate × case fatality rate) is ≥1/300.

Fig 1 Effect of pandemic influenza on UK gross domestic product (GDP) according to various disease and mitigation scenarios (all vaccination strategies assumed to have 60% coverage)

Fig 2 Impact of pandemic influenza on different economic sectors of UK gross domestic product (GDP)
Equivalent variation as percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) and £bn for different influenza pandemic scenarios
| Pandemic scenario | Disease only | 4 week school closure | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case fatality rate | Clinical attack rate | % of GDP | £bn | % of GDP | £bn | ||
| Low | Low | −0.7 | −11.8 | −5.1 | −85.8 | ||
| Medium | −1 | −16.8 | −5.4 | −90.8 | |||
| High | −1.5 | −25.2 | −5.8 | −97.6 | |||
| High | Low | −4.8 | −80.7 | −8.8 | −148.0 | ||
| Medium | −5.4 | −90.8 | −9.4 | −158.1 | |||
| High | −6.3 | −106.0 | −10.3 | −173.2 | |||
| Extreme | Low | −8.7 | −146.3 | −12.7 | −213.6 | ||
| Medium | −10.8 | −181.7 | −14.8 | −248.9 | |||
| High | −14 | −235.5 | −17.9 | −301.1 | |||