| Literature DB >> 21410965 |
Ellen Brooks-Pollock1, Natasha Tilston, W John Edmunds, Ken T D Eames.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the 2009 H1N1v influenza epidemic, the total number of symptomatic cases was estimated by combining influenza-like illness (ILI) consultations, virological surveillance and assumptions about healthcare-seeking behaviour. Changes in healthcare-seeking behaviour due to changing scientific information, media coverage and public anxiety, were not included in case estimates. The purpose of the study was to improve estimates of the number of symptomatic H1N1v cases and the case fatality rate (CFR) in England by quantifying healthcare-seeking behaviour using an internet-based survey carried out during the course of the 2009 H1N1v influenza epidemic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21410965 PMCID: PMC3073914 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-11-68
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Estimated healthcare-seeking behaviour during the 2009 H1N1v epidemic in England from the UK flusurvey. The proportion of UK flusurvey users with HPA case definition H1N1v that sought some form of medical attention between July and December 2009: (a) comparison between age and gender groups during the second wave (September to December 2009); (b) month by month comparison between age groups; (c) healthcare-seeking behaviour of those with case definition ILI compared to that of those reporting other symptoms. The dashed line is the behaviour of a 'typical' ILI case during the epidemic; (d) the proportion of people visiting a GP. The solid line is the behaviour of a 'typical' ILI case during the epidemic. In each panel the solid bars represent the mean and the vertical lines indicate 95% confidence bounds on the mean.
Figure 2Re-estimation of epidemic curve and Case Fatality Rate (CFR) accounting for changing healthcare-seeking behaviour behaviour. a) The flusurvey adjusted epidemic curve (grey bars - the error bars represent 95% CI in healthcare-seeking behaviour) and the HPA real-time estimate (black line with circles). Both estimates are calculated from ILI consultations (blue line with squares) adjusted (red line with dots) using virological surveillance; b) the flusurvey-adjusted Case Fatality Rate (CFR) (light bars) compared to previous estimates [2] (dark bars). The CFR is shown as number of deaths per 100,000 cases for age groups up to 64 years and number of deaths per 10,000 cases for the age group 65 and older (i.e. the values represented by the pair of bars on the right is a factor of 10 greater than the other bars).