Hughes Helen E, Morbey Roger, Fouillet Anne, Caserio-Schönemann Céline, Dobney Alec, Hughes Thomas C, Smith Gillian E, Elliot Alex J
Real-time Syndromic Surveillance Team, National Infection Service, Public Health England, Birmingham, UK.
The Farr Institute, The Health eResearch Centre, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMJ Open. 2018 Apr 19;8(4):e018732. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018732.
Poor air quality (AQ) is a global public health issue and AQ events can span across countries. Using emergency department (ED) syndromic surveillance from England and France, we describe changes in human health indicators during periods of particularly poor AQ in London and Paris during 2014.
Using daily AQ data for 2014, we identified three periods of poor AQ affecting both London and Paris. Anonymised near real-time ED attendance syndromic surveillance data from EDs across England and France were used to monitor the health impact of poor AQ.Using the routine English syndromic surveillance detection methods, increases in selected ED syndromic indicators (asthma, difficulty breathing and myocardial ischaemia), in total and by age, were identified and compared with periods of poor AQ in each city. Retrospective Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney tests were used to identify significant increases in ED attendance data on days with (and up to 3 days following) poor AQ.
Almost 1.5 million ED attendances were recorded during the study period (27 February 2014 to 1 October 2014). Significant increases in ED attendances for asthma were identified around periods of poor AQ in both cities, especially in children (aged 0-14 years). Some variation was seen in Paris with a rapid increase during the first AQ period in asthma attendances among children (aged 0-14 years), whereas during the second period the increase was greater in adults.
This work demonstrates the public health value of syndromic surveillance during air pollution incidents. There is potential for further cross-border harmonisation to provide Europe-wide early alerting to health impacts and improve future public health messaging to healthcare services to provide warning of increases in demand.
空气质量差是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,空气质量事件可能会跨越国界。利用来自英国和法国急诊科的症状监测数据,我们描述了2014年伦敦和巴黎空气质量特别差期间人类健康指标的变化。
利用2014年的每日空气质量数据,我们确定了影响伦敦和巴黎的三个空气质量差的时期。使用来自英国和法国各地急诊科的匿名近实时急诊就诊症状监测数据来监测空气质量差对健康的影响。采用常规的英国症状监测检测方法,确定选定的急诊症状指标(哮喘、呼吸困难和心肌缺血)在总体上以及按年龄划分的增加情况,并与每个城市空气质量差的时期进行比较。采用回顾性威尔科克森-曼-惠特尼检验来确定空气质量差当天(以及之后3天)急诊就诊数据的显著增加。
在研究期间(2014年2月27日至2014年10月1日)记录了近150万次急诊就诊。在两个城市空气质量差的时期前后,哮喘急诊就诊人数显著增加,尤其是在儿童(0至14岁)中。在巴黎观察到一些差异,在第一个空气质量时期,儿童(0至14岁)哮喘就诊人数迅速增加,而在第二个时期,成年人的增加更为明显。
这项工作证明了在空气污染事件期间症状监测的公共卫生价值。进一步跨境协调有可能在全欧洲范围内对健康影响提供早期预警,并改善未来向医疗服务机构传递的公共卫生信息,以提供需求增加的警告。