流感和呼吸道合胞病毒的医院利用率:一种新方法和关键评估。

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Population Health Metrics Pub Date : 2021-06-14 DOI:10.1186/s12963-021-00252-5
Emily K Johnson, Dillon Sylte, Sandra S Chaves, You Li, Cedric Mahe, Harish Nair, John Paget, Tayma van Pomeren, Ting Shi, Cecile Viboud, Spencer L James
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:流感和呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)显著增加了急性下呼吸道感染(ALRI)住院治疗的负担,但异质的编码实践和住院数据的可用性使得很难仅根据编码诊断来估计这两种疾病的全球医院利用率。方法:本研究通过计算流感和呼吸道合胞病毒引起的ALRI的比例,并将该比例应用于以ALRI编码为主要诊断的住院患者,来估计流感和呼吸道不合胞病毒的住院率。归因于流感和呼吸道合胞病毒的ALRI比例是从一项对360个描述住院人数的总来源的荟萃分析中提取的,这些来源被输入到随年龄变化的贝叶斯混合效应模型中,随地点变化的随机效应。将该模型的结果应用于44个国家的住院患者数据集,分别得出流感和呼吸道合胞病毒的医院利用率,并将其与每种疾病的原始编码入院率进行比较。结果:对于大多数年龄组,这些方法估计全国入院率高于相同住院来源的直接编码流感或呼吸道合胞病毒入院率。在许多住院患者来源中,国际疾病分类(ICD)编码细节不足以直接估计呼吸道合胞病毒负担。仅在初级诊断中使用这种方法,老年人的流感住院负担估计值似乎被大大低估了。混合效应模型的应用减少了流感和呼吸道合胞病毒国家之间的异质性,这是由于编码实践和国家之间的差异而产生的偏差。结论:这种新方法为使用广泛的临床数据库估计流感和呼吸道合胞病毒的医院利用率提供了机会。对流感和呼吸道合胞病毒相关住院的估计通常看起来很有希望,但在老年人中,初级诊断的流感估计似乎被严重低估了。在ALRI编码(即原发性与非原发性病因)以及研究中流感和呼吸道合胞病毒阳性比例的年龄分布方面,各国之间仍存在相当大的异质性。虽然这种分析很有趣,因为它在没有实验室确认的入院数据的地方具有广泛的数据利用率和适用性,但了解变异性和数据质量的来源对这些方法的未来应用至关重要。
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Hospital utilization rates for influenza and RSV: a novel approach and critical assessment.

Background: Influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) contribute significantly to the burden of acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI) inpatient care, but heterogeneous coding practices and availability of inpatient data make it difficult to estimate global hospital utilization for either disease based on coded diagnoses alone.

Methods: This study estimates rates of influenza and RSV hospitalization by calculating the proportion of ALRI due to influenza and RSV and applying this proportion to inpatient admissions with ALRI coded as primary diagnosis. Proportions of ALRI attributed to influenza and RSV were extracted from a meta-analysis of 360 total sources describing inpatient hospital admissions which were input to a Bayesian mixed effects model over age with random effects over location. Results of this model were applied to inpatient admission datasets for 44 countries to produce rates of hospital utilization for influenza and RSV respectively, and rates were compared to raw coded admissions for each disease.

Results: For most age groups, these methods estimated a higher national admission rate than the rate of directly coded influenza or RSV admissions in the same inpatient sources. In many inpatient sources, International Classification of Disease (ICD) coding detail was insufficient to estimate RSV burden directly. The influenza inpatient burden estimates in older adults appear to be substantially underestimated using this method on primary diagnoses alone. Application of the mixed effects model reduced heterogeneity between countries in influenza and RSV which was biased by coding practices and between-country variation.

Conclusions: This new method presents the opportunity of estimating hospital utilization rates for influenza and RSV using a wide range of clinical databases. Estimates generally seem promising for influenza and RSV associated hospitalization, but influenza estimates from primary diagnosis seem highly underestimated among older adults. Considerable heterogeneity remains between countries in ALRI coding (i.e., primary vs non-primary cause), and in the age profile of proportion positive for influenza and RSV across studies. While this analysis is interesting because of its wide data utilization and applicability in locations without laboratory-confirmed admission data, understanding the sources of variability and data quality will be essential in future applications of these methods.

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来源期刊
Population Health Metrics
Population Health Metrics PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
29 weeks
期刊介绍: Population Health Metrics aims to advance the science of population health assessment, and welcomes papers relating to concepts, methods, ethics, applications, and summary measures of population health. The journal provides a unique platform for population health researchers to share their findings with the global community. We seek research that addresses the communication of population health measures and policy implications to stakeholders; this includes papers related to burden estimation and risk assessment, and research addressing population health across the full range of development. Population Health Metrics covers a broad range of topics encompassing health state measurement and valuation, summary measures of population health, descriptive epidemiology at the population level, burden of disease and injury analysis, disease and risk factor modeling for populations, and comparative assessment of risks to health at the population level. The journal is also interested in how to use and communicate indicators of population health to reduce disease burden, and the approaches for translating from indicators of population health to health-advancing actions. As a cross-cutting topic of importance, we are particularly interested in inequalities in population health and their measurement.
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