| Literature DB >> 27899148 |
Elikana E Lekei1, Aiwerasia V Ngowi2, Leslie London3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute pesticide poisoning (APP) is known to cause serious injuries to end users globally but the magnitude of this problem in Tanzania is not well known. This study aimed to determine the extent and pattern of underreporting of APP in Tanzania to inform the development of a surveillance system and appropriate interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Acute pesticide poisoning; Modeling; Tanzania; Underreporting
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27899148 PMCID: PMC5129639 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-016-0203-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Overview of the method
| Step 1 | Health facility admissions in 3 regions of Tanzania over the period of 12 months were monitored prospectively from Jan 2006 to December 2006 using intensified surveillance to generate population-based estimates for the incidence of APP, stratified by circumstances of poisoning (occupational, accidental, suicide, homicide and unknown circumstances). These generated baseline APP rates for further adjustment. |
| Step 2 | Data from a household survey of farmers was compared to records in health facilities to generate a ratio of occupational APP cases reported at health facilities, reflecting the extent of under-reporting of APP cases due to occupational circumstances. The 95% confidence interval for this ratio was used to generate a high and low boundary for the estimate. |
| Step 3 | Cases of APP in the prospective study for which circumstances were unknown were allocated in a sensitivity analysis to each of the other four known circumstancesa, and the contribution of newly allocated occupational APP adjusted for under-reporting. |
| Step 4 | The rate of occupational APP recorded at health facilities was adjusted to account for the under-reporting of occupational APP identified in Step 2, including high and low boundary estimates, and to account for reallocation of unknown to known circumstances as identified in in Step 3. |
| Step 5 | Total APP incidence rates, summing across all circumstances, were generated under the different contingencies identified. The contribution of occupational poisoning as a proportion to overall APP incidence was described. |
a Known circumstances included suicide, occupational, accidental and homicide. However, because cases with homicide were so few (1.1% of all cases), the sensitivity analysis included homicide within the category accidental for allocation and only three circumstances were used for allocation: suicide, accidental and occupational
Sensitivity analysis of APP ratesa per 1000000 by circumstances under different redistribution allocations for ‘unknown’ circumstances
| Circumstance | n | % | Baseline rate per 1,000,000 | APP Rates per 1,000,000 under different scenarios | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Circumstance data table | % by circumstance | No Redistribution | (a) all unknown to Suicide | (b) all unknown to Accident/Homicide | (c) all unknown to Occupational | (d) unknown redistributed equallyb to other categories | (e) unknown allocated proportionallyc to other categories | |
| (a) Unknown | 44 | 19.13 | 2.74 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| (b) Suicide | 108 | 46.96 | 6.71 | 9.45 | 6.71 | 6.71 | 7.63 | 8.30 |
| (c) Accidental/ homicide | 59 | 25.65 | 3.67 | 3.67 | 6.41 | 3.67 | 4.58 | 4.54 |
| (d) Occupational | 19 | 8.26 | 1.18 | 1.18 | 1.18 | 3.92 | 2.09 | 1.46 |
| Total | 230 | 100.00 | 14.30 | 14.30 | 14.30 | 14.30 | 14.30 | 14.30 |
| Sum of circumstances other than occupational (a + b + c) | 13.12 | 13.12 | 13.12 | 10.38 | 12.21 | 12.84 | ||
a The baseline rates were obtained in a prospective follow-up of 10 facilities in four regions of Tanzania over 12 months in 2006
bThe 44 cases of APP were allocated in equal proportion to suicide, occupational circumstances and accident/homicide
cThe 44 cases of APP with were allocated in proportion to the baseline rates of APP for suicide, occupational circumstances and accident/homicide (6.71: 1.18: 3.67, respectively)
Estimates for Occupational APP Incidence Rates (Cases/1000000 – results of sensitivity analyses
| Under-estimation Correction Factor | IRs derived from the different scenario allocations to occupational poisoning | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario (a) and (b) 1.18 | Scenario (c) 3.92 | Scenario (d) 2.09 | Scenario (e) 1.46 | |
| 9.6 | 11.328 | 37.632 | 20.064 | 14.016 |
| 22.2 | 26.196 | 87.024 | 46.398 | 32.412 |
| 71.4 | 84.252 | 279.888 | 149.226 | 104.244 |
Summation of occupational and non-occupational IR for APP
| Underestimation factor | Scenario | IR for APP (Cases/million) in occupational, non-occupational and all circumstances) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario (a) and (b) | Scenario (c) | Scenario (d) | Scenario (e) | ||
| Non occupationala | 13.12 | 10.38 | 12.21 | 12.84 | |
| 9.6 | Occupational | 11.33 | 37.63 | 20.06 | 14.02 |
| Total | 24.45 | 48.01 | 32.27 | 26.86 | |
| 22.2 | Occupational | 26.19 | 87.02 | 46.39 | 32.41 |
| Total | 39.31 | 97.40 | 58.60 | 45.25 | |
| 71.4 | Occupational | 84.25 | 279.89 | 149.23 | 104.24 |
| Total | 97.37 | 290.27 | 161.44 | 117.08 | |
a Non-occupational APP does not change within each scenario– only the under-estimation of occupational APP changes depending on the under-estimation factor used