1. Hospitalisations due to bacterial gastroenteritis: A comparison of surveillance and hospital discharge data
- Author
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Elaine Scallan, H Q McLean, Paul M. Griffin, and Barbara E. Mahon
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Bacterial Gastroenteritis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Salmonella ,Microbiological culture ,Stool sample ,Epidemiology ,030106 microbiology ,Disease ,Escherichia coli O157 ,medicine.disease_cause ,Foodborne Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Wisconsin ,Internal medicine ,Campylobacter Infections ,Hospital discharge ,Medicine ,Escherichia coli Infections ,Original Paper ,business.industry ,Campylobacter ,Gastroenteritis ,Hospitalization ,Infectious Diseases ,Population Surveillance ,Salmonella Infections ,Diagnosis code ,business - Abstract
Studies estimating the human health impact of the foodborne disease often include estimates of the number of gastroenteritis hospitalisations. The aims of this study were to examine the degree to which hospital discharge data underreport hospitalisations due to bacterial gastroenteritis and to estimate the frequency of stool sample submission among patients presenting with gastroenteritis. Using linked laboratory and hospital discharge data from a healthcare organisation and its affiliated hospital, we examined the International Classification of Disease (ICD-9-CM) diagnosis codes assigned to hospitalised adults with culture-confirmedCampylobacter,Salmonella, orEscherichia coliO157 infections and determined the frequency of stool sample submission. Among 138 hospitalised patients with culture-confirmed infections, 43% ofCampylobacterpatients, 56% ofSalmonellapatients and 35% ofE. coliO157 patients had that pathogen-specific code listed on the discharge record. Among patients without their infection listed as a diagnosis, 65% were assigned a nonspecific gastroenteritis code. Submitting a specimen for culture ⩾3 days before discharge was significantly associated with having the pathogen-specific diagnosis listed. Of 6181 patients assigned a nonspecific gastroenteritis code, 69% had submitted a stool sample for bacterial culture. This study can be used to understand differences and adjust for the underreporting and underdiagnosed ofCampylobacter, SalmonellaandE. coliO157 in hospital discharge and surveillance data, respectively.
- Published
- 2018
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