Seasonal influenza causes excess morbidity and mortality at the extremes of age: It disproportionately affects the very young and the very old, typically resulting in "U"-shaped age-distributed curves. By means of a well-established public health department surveillance system using positive influenza tests submitted from sentinel sites, the authors generated annual influenza-specific morbidity curves over a 10-year period (1998-2008) for St. Louis County, Missouri. The authors detected an unusually high incidence of cases of medically attended test-positive influenza, particularly in young adults, during the 2007-2008 season, resulting in an unexpected "W"-shaped age-distributed morbidity curve that was distinctly unique in comparison with the prior 9 influenza seasons. Public health influenza surveillance programs are useful tools for detecting emerging epidemiologic trends that may have clinical importance.
CITATION STYLE
Georgantopoulos, P., Bergquist, E. P., Knaup, R. C., Anthony, J. R., Bailey, T. C., Williams, M. P., & Lawrence, S. J. (2009). Importance of routine public health influenza surveillance: Detection of an unusual W-shaped influenza morbidity curve. American Journal of Epidemiology, 170(12), 1533–1540. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwp305
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