| Literature DB >> 29228966 |
Marcos Amaku1, Marcelo Nascimento Burattini1,2, Eleazar Chaib1, Francisco Antonio Bezerra Coutinho1, David Greenhalgh3, Luis Fernandez Lopez1,4, Eduardo Massad5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National or local laws, norms or regulations (sometimes and in some countries) require medical providers to report notifiable diseases to public health authorities. Reporting, however, is almost always incomplete. This is due to a variety of reasons, ranging from not recognizing the diseased to failures in the technical or administrative steps leading to the final official register in the disease notification system. The reported fraction varies from 9 to 99% and is strongly associated with the disease being reported.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis C; Mathematical models; Notifications system incidence; Prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29228966 PMCID: PMC5725986 DOI: 10.1186/s12976-017-0069-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Biol Med Model ISSN: 1742-4682 Impact factor: 2.432
Parameters used in model (2)
| Parameter | Meaning | Values used in the numerical simulation |
|---|---|---|
|
| Force of Infection | Calculated |
|
| Natural Mortality Rate | 0.0133 year-1a |
|
| Disease-induced Mortality Rate for non-notified individuals | b |
|
| Disease-induced Mortality Rate for notified individuals | b |
|
| Recovery Rate for non-notified individuals | Assumed negligible |
|
| Recovery Rate for notified individuals | Assumed negligible |
|
| Notification Rate | 0.0125 year-1 [ |
aFrom demographic data of Brazil
bConstructed as equal to 0.15/{1 + exp.(−0.1(a − 57.31))} year−1 as in [16]
Fig. 1Time and Age variation of the reported number of HCV infections in Brazil, artificially constructed by extrapolating backwards until 1932
Fig. 2Calculation of INC{A, i} from the SINAN data as shown in Fig. 1
Fig. 3Comparison of the total prevalence calculated according to Amaku et al. [16] (continuous line) and assuming the notification as a sigmoidal extrapolation (dotted line)
Summary of the results
| Results | Current method | First method of [ | Second method of [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence of Notified HCV Infections | 163,902a
| - | - |
| Prevalence of Non-Notified HCV in Brazil | 1,433,638a
| - | - |
| Total Prevalence of HCV in Brazil | 1,597,540a
| - | - |
aUsing only the official SINAN period (2000-2012) assuming zero notification incidence for all years and ages from 2000 backwards until 1932
b Calculated from real data (2000-2012) and extending the data backwards assuming a sigmoidal decay until 1932
c Taking the average number of cases reported annually to SINAN between 2004 and 2012, a period in which a steady state could be assumed
Fig. 4Comparison between the empirical data on the size of the LTWL (crosses) as in Chaib et al. [17] and the result of the application of Eq. (17) (dots)