Behavior of adult influenza patients during the 2009 pandemic after outpatient clinic presentations at a hospital in Tokyo, Japan

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Abstract

The 2009 pandemic of novel swine-origin influenza-origin influenza A (H1N1) highlighted the importance of community mitigation measures such as voluntary isolation. During the pandemic, we investigated the voluntary isolation behavior of patients with influenza during the 7-day period after they visited an outpatient clinic at a hospital in Tokyo, Japan. A questionnaire-based survey was conducted on patients diagnosed with influenza. Of a total of 14 patients, 13 (93%) visited a workplace, school or other potentially crowded setting at least once in the 7-day period after presentation. Five patients (36%) visited a potentially crowded setting either with a fever or on the day after having a fever. The voluntary isolation behavior of Japanese people with influenza did not necessarily adhere to the Japanese government recommendation that people with influenza-like illness stay home for 7 days following the onset of symptoms. © 2011 by The Japanese Society of Tropical Medicine.

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Nonaka, D., Morikawa, H., Arioka, H., Kobayashi, J., Shoda, R., & Mizoue, T. (2011). Behavior of adult influenza patients during the 2009 pandemic after outpatient clinic presentations at a hospital in Tokyo, Japan. Tropical Medicine and Health, 39(3), 83–85. https://doi.org/10.2149/tmh.2011-09

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