Incidence, Etiology, and Healthcare Utilization for Acute Gastroenteritis in the Community, United States

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Abstract

Knowledge of the epidemiology of sporadic acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in the United States is limited. During September 2016–September 2017, we surveyed Kaiser Permanente Northwest members in Oregon and Washington, USA, to collect data on the 30-day prevalence of dually defined AGE and diarrhea disease and related health-seeking behavior; from a subset of participants, we obtained a stool specimen. Using the iterative proportional fitting algorithm with raked weights, we generated AGE prevalence and annualized rate estimates. We detected norovirus, rotavirus, astrovirus, and sapovirus from submitted stool specimens through real-time quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR). We estimated a 30-day prevalence of 10.4% for AGE and 7.6% for diarrhea only; annual rates were 1.27 cases/person/ year for AGE and 0.92 cases/person/year for diarrhea only. Of those with AGE, 19% sought medical care. Almost one quarter (22.4%) of stool specimens from those reporting AGE tested positive for ≥1 viral pathogen, compared with 8.2% from those without AGE.

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APA

Schmidt, M. A., Groom, H. C., Rawlings, A. M., Mattison, C. P., Salas, S. B., Burke, R. M., … Hall, A. J. (2022). Incidence, Etiology, and Healthcare Utilization for Acute Gastroenteritis in the Community, United States. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 28(11), 2234–2242. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2811.220247

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