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Incidence of outpatient
visits and hospitalizations related to influenza in infants and young children.
O'Brien MA, Uyeki TM, Shay DK, Thompson
WW, Kleinman K, McAdam A, Yu XJ, Platt R, Lieu TA.
Center for Child Health Care Studies, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health
Care, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.
OBJECTIVE: The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices currently encourages influenza
vaccination for all children aged 6 to 23 months when feasible, based on studies that have
demonstrated that young children have high hospitalization rates attributable to
influenza. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recently voted to recommend
influenza vaccination for all children beginning during the 2004-2005 influenza season;
information on the rate of outpatient visits due to influenza is needed to better evaluate
the potential health impact and cost-effectiveness of the recommendation. We estimated the
incidence of outpatient visits as well as hospitalizations for specific acute respiratory
illnesses and for influenza-associated outpatient-visit and hospitalization rates among
healthy infants and children in a Massachusetts health maintenance organization.
DESIGN/METHODS: Surveillance data were used to identify when influenza viruses,
respiratory syncytial viruses, and parainfluenza viruses were circulating in the greater
Boston area during 1994-2000. Using computerized medical records, we identified outpatient
visits and hospitalizations for selected respiratory illnesses. Outpatient-visit rates and
hospitalizations attributed to influenza were calculated by subtracting the rate of visits
during the periseasonal period from the rate of visits during the influenza period. Rates
were stratified by age and risk for complications from influenza. RESULTS: Between 1994
and 2000, there were 188 139 outpatient visits and 885 hospitalizations for respiratory
illnesses in the study population. Among healthy children aged 6 to 23 months, the rate
per 100 person-months for outpatient visits during influenza periods was 14.5 (95%
confidence interval [CI]: 13.9 to 15.1), and the excess rate that could be attributed to
influenza compared with the periseasonal period was 1.8 (95% CI: 1.1 to 2.4). Among
healthy children, the rate of hospitalizations for acute respiratory disease was 10.4 per
10 000 person-months (95% CI: 6.0 to 17.0), and the rate that could be attributed to
influenza when compared with the periseasonal baseline period was 3.9 (95% CI: -2.0 to
0.0). Among children who were at high risk for complications from influenza, the rate of
outpatient visits per 100 person-months was 28.7 (95% CI: 26.6 to 30.9) during influenza
periods. The rate of hospitalizations among high-risk children was 44.6 per 10 000
person-months (95% CI: 19.0 to 17.0). CONCLUSION: Influenza season is associated with a
substantial increase in outpatient visits by healthy children. These estimates of
outpatient visits for influenza will help quantify the potential health benefits and cost
savings from influenza vaccination of healthy children aged 6 to 23 months.
SOURCE:
Pediatrics. 2004 Mar;113(3
Pt 1):585-93.
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