| Literature DB >> 22029484 |
Benjamin G Polkinghorne1, David J Muscatello, C Raina Macintyre, Glenda L Lawrence, Paul M Middleton, Siranda Torvaldsen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2010, intense focus was brought to bear on febrile convulsions in Australian children particularly in relation to influenza vaccination. Febrile convulsions are relatively common in infants and can lead to hospital admission and severe outcomes. We aimed to examine the relationships between the population incidence of febrile convulsions and influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) seasonal epidemics in children less than six years of age in Sydney Australia using routinely collected syndromic surveillance data and to assess the feasibility of using this data to predict increases in population rates of febrile convulsions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22029484 PMCID: PMC3224367 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-11-291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Weekly population incidence rates of Emergency Department (ED) presentations and urgent ambulance dispatches. 1Electronic Ambulance dispatch data was only available from July 2006.
Lag analysis: change in incidence rates/100,000 population for Ambulance and ED convulsions in children < 6 years associated with a 1/100,000 population increase in all ages ED influenza-like illness and bronchiolitis in children < 3 years
| Independent Variable | Lag1 (weeks) | Ambulance Convulsions | ED Convulsions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter estimate | P-value | Parameter estimate | P-value | ||
| -2 | 2.907 (2.374-3.440) | <0.0001 | 5.119 (4.535-5.704) | <0.0001 | |
| ED2 | -1 | 3.240 (2.769-3.711) | <0.0001 | 6.678 (6.181-7.175) | <0.0001 |
| Influenza- | 0 | 2.948 (2.483-3.412) | <0.0001 | 6.597 (6.096-7.099) | <0.0001 |
| like illness | +1 | 0.122 (-0.065-0.309) | 0.203 | 0.546 (0.247-0.844) | 0.0004 |
| +2 | -0.013 (-0.143-0.118) | 0.8483 | 0.083 (-0.132-0.298) | 0.4499 | |
| -2 | -0.007 (-0.014-0.000) | 0.0631 | -0.008 (-0.016--0.001) | 0.033 | |
| ED3 | -1 | 0.005 (-0.002-0.012) | 0.1559 | 0.023 (0.015-0.030) | <0.0001 |
| Bronchiolitis | 0 | 0.002 (-0.005-0.009) | 0.5969 | 0.020 (0.013-0.028) | <0.0001 |
| +1 | 0.002 (-0.005-0.008) | 0.6648 | -0.006 (-0.014-0.002) | 0.1187 | |
| +2 | 0.011 (0.004-0.018) | 0.0017 | -0.010 (-0.017--0.002) | 0.013 | |
1A negative lag refers to a change in convulsions incidence occurring prior to the change in ILI or bronchiolitis ED visits. A positive lag indicates convulsions incidence changes after the change in ILI or bronchiolitis.
2To control for trend and seasonality, a natural cubic spline with 4 degrees of freedom per year was used.
3To control for trend and seasonality, a natural cubic spline with 4 degrees of freedom per year was insufficient, so 8 degrees of freedom were used.
Final model: change in incidence rates/100,000 population for Ambulance and ED convulsions in children < 6 years, associated with a 1/100,000 population increase in all ages ED influenza-like illness and bronchiolitis in children < 3 years
| Dependent | Independent | Parameter estimate | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ambulance Convulsions (1 Jul 2006 - 30 April 2010) | ED Influenza-like illness | 3.24 (2.69-3.78) | <0.0001 |
| ED Bronchiolitis | 0.00 (0.00-0.01) | 0.2681 | |
| ED Convulsions (1 Jan 2003 - 30 April 2010) | ED Influenza-like illness | 6.66 (6.11-7.21) | <0.0001 |
| ED Bronchiolitis | 0.01 (0.00-0.02) | 0.0067 | |
1ED and ambulance convulsions series were shifted one week earlier than the ILI and bronchiolitis series (lag = -1).
Figure 2Observed versus predicted population rates/100,000 for convulsions ambulance calls by week: 1 Jul 2006 to 30 April 2010.
Figure 3Observed versus predicted population rates/100,000 for convulsions ED presentations by week: 1 Jan 2003 to 30 April 2010.