| Literature DB >> 28279150 |
Geert H Groeneveld1, Anton Dalhuijsen2, Chakib Kara-Zaïtri3, Bob Hamilton4, Margot W de Waal5, Jaap T van Dissel6,7, Jim E van Steenbergen6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clusters of infectious diseases are frequently detected late. Real-time, detailed information about an evolving cluster and possible associated conditions is essential for local policy makers, travelers planning to visit the area, and the local population. This is currently illustrated in the Zika virus outbreak.Entities:
Keywords: Automated; Cluster detection; Hepatitis; Meningoencephalitis; Real-time; Respiratory tract infection
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28279150 PMCID: PMC5345172 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2300-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Trigger diagnostic codes
| DBC/DOT code (Hospital)ª | Representing syndrome/diagnosis |
|---|---|
| Respiratory tract infection | |
| INT401 | Pneumonia |
| INT402 | Interstitial pneumonia |
| INT409 | Other respiratory tract infections |
| LON1401 | Pneumonia |
| LON1405 | Acute (trachea)bronchitis |
| KIN3104 | Upper respiratory tract infection |
| KIN3202b | Asthma/bronchial hyperreactivity |
| KIN3207 | Laryngotracheobronchitis |
| KIN3208 | Lower respiratory tract infection |
| KIN3210 | RSV bronchiolitis |
| Infectious hepatitis | |
| INT463 | Viral hepatitis (not B or C) |
| INT944 | Hepatitis B or C |
| MDL701 | Hepatitis |
| MDL705 | Hepatitis B or C with antiviral therapy |
| MDL718 | Acute liver failure |
| KIN3312 | Hepatitis |
| Meningitis/encephalitis | |
| INT441 | Meningitis/encephalitis/brain abscess |
| NEU0101 | Bacterial Meningitis |
| NEU0102 | Non-bacterial meningitis |
| NEU0111 | Encephalitis |
| KIN3511 | Meningitis/encephalitis |
|
|
|
| Respiratory tract infection | |
| R74 | Acute upper respiratory tract infection |
| R77 | Acute laryngitis/tracheitis |
| R78 | Acute bronchitis/bronchiolitis |
| R80 | Influenza |
| R81 | Pneumonia |
| Infectious hepatitis | |
| D13 | Icterus |
| D72 | Infectious hepatitis |
| Meningitis/encephalitis | |
| N70 | Poliomyelitis/(entero)viral infection CNS |
| N71 | Meningitis/encephalitis |
aDBC/DOT codes from internal medicine, pulmonology, pediatrics, neurology and gastroenterology are used
bThis code is only used in children under the age of 5 since asthma/bronchial hyperreactivity, at this age, is most often triggered by a respiratory tract infection
Alerts during the first 2 years of ICARES
| Alert | Syndrome (Health care institution) | Additional public health diagnostics | True cluster | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Respiratory tract infection (GP) | No | No | Different causative agents and coding imperfections |
| 2 | Infectious hepatitis (GP) | Yes | No | Non-infectious hepatitis |
| 3 | Meningoencephalitis (Hospital) | No | Yes | Enterovirus encephalitis |
| 4 | Meningoencephalitis (Hospital) | No | No | Two unrelated cases of Listeria in Katwijk |
| 5 | Infectious hepatitis (GP) | No | No | Coding imperfections |
| 6 | Respiratory tract infection (Hospital and GP) | No | Yes | Long lasting influenza season with high peak incidence |
| 7 | Meningoencephalitis (Hospital) | No | No | Coding imperfections/double coding |
| 8 | Meningoencephalitis (GP) | No | No | Non-acute illness |
Fig. 1Dashboard on 13 August 2014 during meningoencephalitis outbreak. Dial numbers are incident ratios: the ratio between the observed previous 7 days incident rate with the equivalent historic incident rate. Rates are calculated as the numbers of incidents per 100,000 as based upon the GP practice’s population data. The dial color is set as green for an incident ratio of less than 0.75, orange for between 0.75 and 1.40 and red for greater than 1.40. Dials are limited to GP practices as these are the only ones where population data is available. Colored numbers are absolute incident counts for the last 7 days for a given institution. The institution that is displayed, is the one with the largest incident ratio. This is the ratio between observed and historic using rate values if available, otherwise absolute counts. The color is determined in a similar manner to the dial color. Trend arrows are determined from the ratio between the current week’s (previous 7 days) observed incident rate (or observed absolute incident count if rate not available) and the same value as calculated for the previous week. The trend arrow reflects current week versus previous week. A rising trend is shown for ratios greater than 1.1, stable for between 0.9 and 1.1, and falling for less than 0.9. NaN = Not a Number. NaN is displayed when the equivalent historic 7 day period has zero cases. A ratio would result in a divide by zero error
Fig. 2Hospital cases of meningoencephalitis 1/10/2013–1/10/2015
Fig. 3Hospital cases of respiratory tract infections 1/10/2013–1/10/2015
Fig. 4Hospital cases of hepatitis 1/10/2013–1/10/2015