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  4. SARIMA-modelled greater severity and mortality during the 2010/11 post-pandemic influenza season compared to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in English hospitals
 
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SARIMA-modelled greater severity and mortality during the 2010/11 post-pandemic influenza season compared to the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in English hospitals
File(s)
1-s2.0-S1201971221000825-main.pdf (2.5 MB)
Published version
Author(s)
Lau, Krystal
Dorigatti, Ilaria
Miraldo, Marisa
Hauck, Katharina
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Objective

The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates the need for understanding pathways to healthcare demand, morbidity, and mortality of pandemic patients. We estimate H1N1 (1) hospitalization rates, (2) severity rates (length of stay, ventilation, pneumonia, and death) of those hospitalized, (3) mortality rates, and (4) time lags between infections and hospitalizations during the pandemic (June 2009 to March 2010) and post-pandemic influenza season (November 2010 to February 2011) in England.
Methods

Estimates of H1N1 infections from a dynamic transmission model are combined with hospitalizations and severity using time series econometric analyses of administrative patient-level hospital data.
Results

Hospitalization rates were 34% higher and severity rates of those hospitalized were 20%–90% higher in the post-pandemic period than the pandemic. Adults (45–64-years-old) had the highest ventilation and pneumonia hospitalization rates. Hospitalizations did not lag infection during the pandemic for the young (<24-years-old) but lagged by one or more weeks for all ages in the post-pandemic period.
Discussion

The post-pandemic flu season exhibited heightened H1N1 severity, long after the pandemic was declared over. Policymakers should remain vigilant even after pandemics seem to have subsided. Analysis of administrative hospital data and epidemiological modelling estimates can provide valuable insights to inform responses to COVID-19 and future influenza and other disease pandemics.
Date Issued
2021-04-01
Date Acceptance
2021-01-29
Citation
International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2021, 105, pp.161-171
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/87550
DOI
https://www.dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2021.01.070
ISSN
1201-9712
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
161
End Page
171
Journal / Book Title
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume
105
Copyright Statement
© 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of International Society for Infectious Diseases.This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
License URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsor
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Wellcome Trust
National Institute for Health Research
Abdul Latif Jameel Foundation
Grant Number
MR/R015600/1
213494/Z/18/Z
NIHR200908
Subjects
H1N1
Hospitalizations
Mortality
Pandemics
Time series
Microbiology
0605 Microbiology
1108 Medical Microbiology
1117 Public Health and Health Services
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2021-02-03
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