New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Bureau of Communicable Disease, Queens, NY 11101, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2012 Mar-Apr;127(2):195-201. doi: 10.1177/003335491212700208.
Most animal bites in the United States are due to dogs, with approximately 4.7 million reports per year. Surveillance for dog and other animal bites requires a substantial investment of time and resources, and underreporting is common. We described the use and findings of electronic hospital emergency department (ED) chief complaint data to characterize patients and summarize trends in people treated for dog and other animal bites in New York City (NYC) EDs between 2003 and 2006.
Retrospective data were obtained from the syndromic surveillance system at the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. We used a statistical program to identify chief complaint free-text fields as one of four categories of animal bites. We evaluated descriptive statistics and univariate associations on the available demographic data. The findings were also compared with data collected through the existing passive reporting animal bite surveillance system.
During the study period, more than 6,000 animal bite patient visits were recorded per year. The proportion of visits for animal bites did not appear to change over time. Dog bites accounted for more than 70% and cat bites accounted for 13% of animal bite patient visits. Demographic characteristics of patients were similar to those identified in NYC's passive surveillance system.
Our findings suggest that the use of ED data offers a simple, less resource-intensive, and sustainable way of conducting animal bite surveillance and a novel use of syndromic surveillance data. However, it cannot replace traditional surveillance used to manage individual patients for potential rabies exposures.
在美国,大多数动物咬伤是由狗引起的,每年约有 470 万例报告。对狗和其他动物咬伤的监测需要大量的时间和资源投入,而且漏报很常见。我们描述了电子医院急诊部(ED)主要投诉数据的使用和结果,以描述患者的特征,并总结 2003 年至 2006 年期间纽约市(NYC)ED 中治疗狗和其他动物咬伤患者的趋势。
从纽约市卫生和心理卫生部的综合征监测系统中获取回顾性数据。我们使用统计程序将主要投诉的自由文本字段识别为动物咬伤的四个类别之一。我们评估了现有人口统计数据的描述性统计和单变量关联。这些发现还与通过现有的被动报告动物咬伤监测系统收集的数据进行了比较。
在研究期间,每年记录的动物咬伤患者就诊次数超过 6000 次。动物咬伤就诊的比例似乎没有随时间变化。狗咬伤占动物咬伤患者就诊的 70%以上,猫咬伤占 13%。患者的人口统计学特征与在 NYC 被动监测系统中识别出的特征相似。
我们的发现表明,使用 ED 数据可以简单、资源密集度较低且可持续地进行动物咬伤监测,并且是对综合征监测数据的新应用。然而,它不能替代用于管理个别患者潜在狂犬病暴露的传统监测。