1. Can poison control data be used for pharmaceutical poisoning surveillance?
- Author
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Naun CA, Olsen CS, Dean JM, Olson LM, Cook LJ, and Keenan HT
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Algorithms, Child, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Male, Medical Record Linkage, Retrospective Studies, Utah epidemiology, Databases, Factual, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions epidemiology, Poison Control Centers statistics & numerical data, Population Surveillance methods
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the association between the frequencies of pharmaceutical exposures reported to a poison control center (PCC) and those seen in the emergency department (ED)., Design: A statewide population-based retrospective comparison of frequencies of ED pharmaceutical poisonings with frequencies of pharmaceutical exposures reported to a regional PCC. ED poisonings, identified by International Classification of Diseases, Version 9 (ICD-9) codes, were grouped into substance categories. Using a reproducible algorithm facilitated by probabilistic linkage, codes from the PCC classification system were mapped into the same categories. A readily identifiable subset of PCC calls was selected for comparison., Measurements: Correlations between frequencies of quarterly exposures by substance categories were calculated using Pearson correlation coefficients and partial correlation coefficients with adjustment for seasonality., Results: PCC reported exposures correlated with ED poisonings in nine of 10 categories. Partial correlation coefficients (r(p)) indicated strong associations (r(p)>0.8) for three substance categories that underwent large changes in their incidences (opiates, benzodiazepines, and muscle relaxants). Six substance categories were moderately correlated (r(p)>0.6). One category, salicylates, showed no association. Limitations Imperfect overlap between ICD-9 and PCC codes may have led to miscategorization. Substances without changes in exposure frequency have inadequate variability to detect association using this method., Conclusion: PCC data are able to effectively identify trends in poisonings seen in EDs and may be useful as part of a pharmaceutical poisoning surveillance system. The authors developed an algorithm-driven technique for mapping American Association of Poison Control Centers codes to ICD-9 codes and identified a useful subset of poison control exposures for analysis.
- Published
- 2011
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