| Literature DB >> 34886084 |
Alex J Elliot1,2, Christopher D Bennett1, Helen E Hughes1,2, Roger A Morbey1,2, Daniel Todkill1, Ross Thompson3,4, Owen Landeg3,4, Emer OConnell3,4, Mark Seltzer5, Will Lang5, Obaghe Edeghere1, Isabel Oliver6.
Abstract
Thunderstorm asthma is often characterised by a sudden surge in patients presenting with exacerbated symptoms of asthma linked to thunderstorm activity. Here, we describe a large spike in asthma and difficulty breathing symptoms observed across parts of England on 17 June 2021. The number of healthcare presentations during the asthma event was compared to expected levels for the overall population and across specific regions. Across affected geographical areas, emergency department attendances for asthma increased by 560% on 17 June compared to the average number of weekday daily attendances during the previous 4 weeks. General practitioner out of hours contacts increased by 349%, National Health Service (NHS) 111 calls 193%, NHS 111 online assessments 581% and ambulance call outs 54%. Increases were particularly noted in patient age groups 5-14 and 15-44 years. In non-affected regions, increases were small (<10%) or decreased, except for NHS 111 online assessments where there was an increase of 39%. A review of the meteorological conditions showed several localised, weak, or moderate thunderstorms specifically across parts of Southeast England on the night of June 16. In this unprecedented episode of asthma, the links to meteorologically defined thunderstorm activity were not as clear as previous episodes, with less evidence of 'severe' thunderstorm activity in those areas affected, prompting further discussion about the causes of these events and implications for public health management of the risk.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; difficulty breathing; pollen; syndromic surveillance; thunderstorm asthma
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34886084 PMCID: PMC8657080 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182312353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Daily (A) emergency department attendances for asthma; (B) NHS 111 calls for difficulty breathing; (C) NHS 111 online assessments for difficulty breathing; (D) out of hours general practitioner contacts for difficulty breathing/wheeze/asthma; and (E) ambulance calls for breathing problems for England (left panels) and stratified by storm affected and non-affected regions (right panels). 1 Counts aggregated across London, Southeast, East of England regions; 2 counts aggregated across Northwest, Northeast, Yorkshire and Humber, West Midlands, East Midlands, and Southwest regions.
Observed and expected cases of asthma and difficulty breathing in across affected and non-affected regions 17 June 2021.
| Syndromic System | Indicator | Affected Regions 1 | Non-Affected Regions 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expected 3 | Observed 4 | % Increase | Expected | Observed | % Increase | ||
| Emergency department | Asthma attendances | 39 | 257 | 560 | 76 | 77 | 2 |
| NHS 111 | Difficulty breathing calls | 564 | 1651 | 193 | 686 | 712 | 4 |
| NHS 111 online | Difficulty breathing assessments | 148 | 1009 | 581 | 244 | 339 | 39 |
| GP out of hours | Difficulty breathing/wheeze/asthma contacts | 71 | 320 | 349 | 89 | 74 | −16 |
| Ambulance | Breathing problems calls | 653 | 1006 | 54 | 984 | 998 | 1 |
1 Counts aggregated across London, Southeast, East of England regions; 2 counts aggregated across Northwest, Northeast, Yorkshire and Humber, West Midlands, East Midlands, and Southwest regions; 3 average number of daily counts expected on a weekday (Monday to Friday) based upon activity recorded in the preceding four weeks (weekdays inclusive through 24 May to 16 June 2021); 4 average number of daily counts observed based upon activity on 17 June 2021.
Figure 2Rainfall radar for June 17 2021 0030BST (left panel) and 1430BST (right panel) centred on southeast England. Thunderstorm locations are illustrated by red and white pixels where rainfall is heaviest. Source: Met Office ©Crown Copyright 2021.