Rosenkötter Nicole, Ziemann Alexandra, Riesgo Luis Garcia-Castrillo, Gillet Jean Bernard, Vergeiner Gernot, Krafft Thomas, Brand Helmut
Department of International Health, CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, Faculty for Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, Duboisdomein 30, Maastricht 6229 GT, The Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Oct 1;13:905. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-905.
Emergency medical service (EMS) data, particularly from the emergency department (ED), is a common source of information for syndromic surveillance. However, the entire EMS chain, consists of both out-of-hospital and in-hospital services. Differences in validity and timeliness across these data sources so far have not been studied. Neither have the differences in validity and timeliness of this data from different European countries. In this paper we examine the validity and timeliness of the entire chain of EMS data sources from three European regions for common syndromic influenza surveillance during the A(H1N1) influenza pandemic in 2009.
We gathered local, regional, or national information on influenza-like illness (ILI) or respiratory syndrome from an Austrian Emergency Medical Dispatch Service (EMD-AT), an Austrian and Belgian ambulance services (EP-AT, EP-BE) and from a Belgian and Spanish emergency department (ED-BE, ED-ES). We examined the timeliness of the EMS data in identifying the beginning of the autumn/winter wave of pandemic A(H1N1) influenza as compared to the reference data. Additionally, we determined the sensitivity and specificity of an aberration detection algorithm (Poisson CUSUM) in EMS data sources for detecting the autumn/winter wave of the A(H1N1) influenza pandemic.
The ED-ES data demonstrated the most favourable validity, followed by the ED-BE data. The beginning of the autumn/winter wave of pandemic A(H1N1) influenza was identified eight days in advance in ED-BE data. The EP data performed stronger in data sets for large catchment areas (EP-BE) and identified the beginning of the autumn/winter wave almost at the same time as the reference data (time lag +2 days). EMD data exhibited timely identification of the autumn/winter wave of A(H1N1) but demonstrated weak validity measures.
In this study ED data exhibited the most favourable performance in terms of validity and timeliness for syndromic influenza surveillance, along with EP data for large catchment areas. For the other data sources performance assessment delivered no clear results. The study shows that routinely collected data from EMS providers can augment and enhance public health surveillance of influenza by providing information during health crises in which such information must be both timely and readily obtainable.
紧急医疗服务(EMS)数据,尤其是来自急诊科(ED)的数据,是症状监测的常见信息来源。然而,整个EMS链包括院外和院内服务。到目前为止,尚未研究这些数据源在有效性和及时性方面的差异。来自不同欧洲国家的此类数据在有效性和及时性方面的差异也未得到研究。在本文中,我们研究了2009年甲型H1N1流感大流行期间,来自三个欧洲地区的整个EMS数据源链对于常见症状性流感监测的有效性和及时性。
我们收集了来自奥地利紧急医疗调度服务(EMD-AT)、奥地利和比利时救护车服务(EP-AT、EP-BE)以及比利时和西班牙急诊科(ED-BE、ED-ES)的关于流感样疾病(ILI)或呼吸道综合征的本地、区域或国家信息。我们将EMS数据在识别甲型H1N1流感大流行秋冬波开始时间方面的及时性与参考数据进行了比较。此外,我们确定了EMS数据源中用于检测甲型H1N1流感大流行秋冬波的异常检测算法(泊松累积和)的敏感性和特异性。
ED-ES数据显示出最有利的有效性,其次是ED-BE数据。在ED-BE数据中,甲型H1N1流感大流行秋冬波的开始时间提前了八天被识别出来。EP数据在大集水区数据集(EP-BE)中表现更强,并且几乎与参考数据同时识别出秋冬波的开始(时间滞后+2天)。EMD数据及时识别出了甲型H1N1流感的秋冬波,但有效性指标较弱。
在本研究中,就症状性流感监测的有效性和及时性而言,ED数据表现最为出色,大集水区的EP数据也是如此。对于其他数据源,性能评估没有得出明确结果。该研究表明,从EMS提供者那里常规收集的数据可以通过在健康危机期间提供及时且易于获取的信息,来增强和加强流感的公共卫生监测。