1. Rapid Detection of Influenza Outbreaks in Long Term Care Facilities Reduces Emergency Room Visits and Hospitalization
- Author
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Temte, Jonathan, Checovich, Mary, Mundt, Marlon, Barlow, Shari, Hamrick, Irene, and Reisdorf, Erik
- Subjects
Medical care -- Utilization ,Hospitals -- Emergency service ,Antiviral agents -- Dosage and administration -- Patient outcomes ,Influenza -- Diagnosis -- Drug therapy ,Long-term care facilities -- Forecasts and trends ,Market trend/market analysis ,Health ,Science and technology - Abstract
Context: Influenza is a significant respiratory pathogen for residents of long-term care facilities (LTCFs). Rapid influenza detection tests (RIDT) may enable early outbreak detection allowing a timely response. Objective: We assessed whether RIDT for LTCF residents with acute respiratory infection is associated with increased antiviral use and decreased healthcare utilization. Study Design and Analysis: Non-blinded, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT0296487). Setting: Wisconsin LTCFs. Population Studied: Residents of 20 LTCFs matched by bed capacity and geographic location. Intervention: (1) modified case identification criteria and (2) nursing- staff initiated collection of nasal swab specimen for on-site RIDT. Outcome Measures: Primary outcome measures, expressed as events per 1000 resident-weeks, included antiviral treatment courses, aniviral prophylaxis courses, total emergency department (ED) visits, ED visits for respiratory illness, total hospitalization, hospitalization for respiratory illness, hospital length of stay, total deaths, and deaths due to respiratory illness over three influenza seasons. Results: Oseltamivir use for prophylaxis was higher at intervention LTCFs (2.6 vs 1.9 courses per 1000 person-weeks; rate ratio: 1.38; 95%CI: 1.24-1.54; p, Presenters Jonathan Temte, MD, PhD, MS, Mary Checovich, Marlon Mundt, PhD, Shari Barlow, BA, Irene Hamrick, MD, FAAFP, AGSF, CMD, Erik Reisdorf, [...]
- Published
- 2023