| Literature DB >> 23206689 |
Shu E Soh1, Alex R Cook, Mark I C Chen, Vernon J Lee, Jeffery L Cutter, Vincent T K Chow, Nancy W S Tee, Raymond T P Lin, Wei-Yen Lim, Ian G Barr, Cui Lin, Meng Chee Phoon, Li Wei Ang, Sunil K Sethi, Chia Yin Chong, Lee Gan Goh, Denise L M Goh, Paul A Tambyah, Koh Cheng Thoon, Yee Sin Leo, Seang Mei Saw.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schools are important foci of influenza transmission and potential targets for surveillance and interventions. We compared several school-based influenza monitoring systems with clinic-based influenza-like illness (ILI) surveillance, and assessed the variation in illness rates between and within schools.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23206689 PMCID: PMC3544582 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Description of measures of influenza-related illness during initial epidemic of pdmH1N1
| Based on ILI reporting by network of 23 GPs, where numerator is number of ILI reports and denominator is number of GPs reporting per day (median 14/d, IQR: 10-15); ILI is defined here as a consult for acute respiratory illness with a temperature of 38°C and above | 25 Jun 2009 to 10 Oct 2009 (weeks 25 to 40)1 | NA | NA | 440 | 279 | |
| Based on testing of ILI samples from a separate sentinel GP network by the National Public Health Laboratory, where numerator is number of samples positive for pdmH1N1 and denominator is number of samples tested; ILI is defined here as a consult for acute respiratory illness with a temperature of 38°C and above | 21 Jun 2009 to 10 Oct 2009 (weeks 25 to 40)2 | 1,372 | 1,029 | 878 | 656 | |
| Notifications of laboratory confirmed cases of pdmH1N1 as compiled by the Ministry of Education | 12 Jun 2009 to 7 Oct 2009 (weeks 23 to 40) | 270,3443 | 215,3793 | 654 | 533 | |
| Temperature taking of students conducted twice daily in all schools; counts of the number of students detected to have fever on twice daily temperature taking is presented, with fever defined as 37.9°C and above for children of ages 12 years and below and 37.6°C and above for children of ages 13 years and above | 30 Jun 2009 to 24 Jul 2009 (weeks 26 to 29)4 | 270,3443 | 215,3793 | 4,656 | 2,932 | |
| 3 primary and 3 secondary schools from different areas of Singapore were selected to report FRI episodes, with FRI defined as fever of ≥ 37.5°C accompanied by either cough or sore throat; data was collated by the class teacher-in-charge once every 2 weeks | 29 Jun 2009 to 3 Oct 2009 (weeks 26 to 39)5 | 4,320 | 4,821 | 964 | 1,178 | |
| Age-stratified serological data based on the proportion with hemagglutination inhibition titers ≥ 40 to pdmH1N1 in post-epidemic samples (Post-SS) minus that in pre-epidemic samples (Pre-SS), adjusted for the sensitivity of detecting confirmed infections using cross-sectional hemagglutination inhibition titers ≥ 40 to pdmH1N1 | Pre-SS: 1 Feb 2008 to 31 May 2009 | 381 | 321 | 3 | 34 | |
| Post-SS: 1 Oct 2009 to 2 Jun 2010 | 124 | 96 | 41 | 39 | ||
1 Estimates for epidemiological week 25 were extrapolated from the ILI rate for the 3 days (25 June to 27 June 2009) where data was available.
2 Only data from these dates were extracted, though surveillance extends before and after these dates.
3 Based on school enrolment on 29 June 2009.
4 Data on 29 June 2009 discarded due to inaccuracies in reporting on first day of school.
5 Up to week 34 for all 6 schools, and up to week 39 for 2 primary and 2 secondary schools.
Figure 1Data derived from clinic-based indicators of epidemic activity from epidemiological week 25 to 40 (21 June 2009 to 10 October 2009). A) GP-ILI data, expressed as ILI consults per GP per week. B) Lab-ILI data, expressed as weekly proportion of ILI samples positive for pdmH1N1. C) Composite indicator of GP*Lab-ILI (by epidemiological week) which gives the estimated ILI consults per GP per week attributable to pdmH1N1 influenza.
Figure 2Comparison of school-based indicators of epidemic activity with GP-ILI activity expressed as consults per GP per week. A and B) Sch-LCC: Notifications of laboratory confirmed pdmH1N1; C and D) Sch-DTM: Daily temperature monitoring system; E and F) Sch-FRI: School-based FRI reporting, in primary and secondary schools respectively. Red and purple lines denote data from school-based indicators, while blue and green lines give the GP-ILI activity for primary and secondary schools respectively.
Comparison of school-based with clinic-based indicators
| Cumulative incidence in entire period | Pri | 34 | 21 | 0.24 | 32 | 25 |
| | Sec | 19 | 13 | 0.25 | 36 | 25 |
| Cumulative incidence up to week 30 | Pri | 17 | 10 | 0.15 | 15 | 13 |
| | Sec | 10 | 6.9 | 0.20 | 19 | 15 |
| Fraction of cumulative incidence occurring up to week 30 | Pri | 50% | 49% | 63% | 48% | 51% |
| Sec | 52% | 52% | 79% | 53% | 61% | |
All data has been rounded off to 2 significant figures.
†Incidence data for GP-ILI is expressed as the number of ILI consults per GP per week, while that for GP*Lab-ILI is the number of ILI consults per GP per week attributable to pdmH1N1, as derived by multiplying GP-ILI with the weekly proportion of ILI samples positive for pdmH1N1.
‡Sch-LCC is based on notifications of laboratory confirmed cases of pdmH1N1 by all schools, Sch-FRI is self-reported febrile respiratory illness in the 6 sentinel schools, and Sch-FRI-adj is Sch-FRI adjusted to remove possible contribution from non-pdmH1N1 causes using FRI incidence from week 38 as a proxy for baseline incidence.
Figure 3Distribution of Sch-FRI episodes by schools and classrooms from weeks 26 to 34. A) School level rates of FRI episodes per 100 children; error bars denote 95% confidence intervals from a Poisson distribution. B) Distribution of classroom level rates of FRI episodes per 100 children for 124 primary and 157 secondary school classrooms, in light and dark grey respectively. Dashed line gives the expected distribution based on the combined average of 9.2 FRI episodes per classroom.
Figure 4Modeled and empirical within classroom FRI attack rates within schools for four different hierarchical models. Classes were sorted first by schools (PS1–3 are primary schools, SS1–3 are secondary schools, indicated by families of colors), then by age group of the class (indicated by different shades of color) and then randomly within age groups. Point estimates (colored dots) are posterior means, while colored lines indicate 95% uncertainty intervals. Empirical proportions are indicated by crosses. The full model contains age, class and school effects; the other models ignore one of these three effects.