Communicable Diseases, Emergency Preparedness and Response, Public Health Ontario, 661 University Avenue, 17th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5G 1M1, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Health Sciences Building 155 College Street, 6th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5T 3M7, Canada.
Can J Public Health. 2020 Oct;111(5):752-760. doi: 10.17269/s41997-020-00295-5. Epub 2020 Feb 24.
Syndemics occur when two or more health conditions interact to increase morbidity and mortality and are exacerbated by social, economic, environmental, and political factors. Routine provincial surveillance in Ontario assesses and reports on the epidemiology of single infectious diseases separately. Therefore, we aimed to develop a method that allows disease overlaps to be examined routinely as a path to better understanding and addressing syndemics in Ontario.
We extracted data for individuals with a record of chlamydia, gonorrhea, infectious syphilis, hepatitis B and C, HIV/AIDS, invasive group A streptococcal disease (iGAS), or tuberculosis in Ontario's reportable disease database from 1990 to 2018. We transformed the data into a person-based integrated surveillance dataset retaining individuals (clients) with at least one record between 2006 and 2018.
The resulting dataset had 659,136 unique disease records among 470,673 unique clients. Of those clients, 23.1% had multiple disease records with 50 being the most for one client. We described the frequency of disease overlaps; for example, 34.7% of clients with a syphilis record had a gonorrhea record. We quantified known overlaps, finding 1274 clients had gonorrhea, infectious syphilis, and HIV/AIDS records, and potentially emerging overlaps, finding 59 clients had HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, and iGAS records.
Our novel person-based integrated surveillance dataset represents a platform for ongoing in-depth assessment of disease overlaps such as the relative timing of disease records. It enables a more client-focused approach, is a step towards improved characterization of syndemics in Ontario, and could inform other jurisdictions interested in adopting similar approaches.
当两种或多种健康状况相互作用导致发病率和死亡率增加,并受到社会、经济、环境和政治因素的加剧时,就会发生综合征。安大略省的常规省级监测分别评估和报告单一传染病的流行病学。因此,我们旨在开发一种方法,使疾病重叠能够作为更好地理解和解决安大略省综合征的常规途径进行检查。
我们从 1990 年至 2018 年从安大略省报告疾病数据库中提取了患有衣原体、淋病、传染性梅毒、乙型和丙型肝炎、艾滋病毒/艾滋病、侵袭性 A 组链球菌病(iGAS)或结核病的个人记录的数据。我们将数据转换为基于个人的综合监测数据集,保留了 2006 年至 2018 年至少有一条记录的个人(客户)。
由此产生的数据集在 470,673 个独特客户中拥有 659,136 个独特疾病记录。在这些客户中,23.1%有多个疾病记录,一个客户最多有 50 个记录。我们描述了疾病重叠的频率;例如,34.7%患有梅毒记录的客户也有淋病记录。我们量化了已知的重叠,发现 1274 名客户同时患有淋病、传染性梅毒和艾滋病毒/艾滋病记录,并且潜在的新兴重叠,发现 59 名客户同时患有艾滋病毒/艾滋病、丙型肝炎和 iGAS 记录。
我们新颖的基于个人的综合监测数据集代表了对疾病重叠(例如疾病记录的相对时间)进行持续深入评估的平台。它支持更以客户为中心的方法,是改善安大略省综合征特征的一步,并且可以为其他有兴趣采用类似方法的司法管辖区提供信息。