Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology (Jan 2017)

The Incidence of Acute Gastrointestinal Illness in Canada, Foodbook Survey 2014-2015

  • M. Kate Thomas,
  • Regan Murray,
  • Andrea Nesbitt,
  • Frank Pollari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/5956148
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2017

Abstract

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Acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) is an important public health issue, with many pathogen sources and modes of transmission. A one-year telephone survey was conducted in Canada (2014-2015) to estimate the incidence of self-reported AGI in the previous 28 days and to describe health care seeking behaviour, using a symptom-based case definition. Excluding cases with respiratory symptoms, it is estimated that there are 0.57 self-reported AGI episodes per person-year, almost 19.5 million episodes in Canada each year. The proportion of cases seeking medical care was nearly 9%, of which 17% reported being requested to submit a sample for laboratory testing, and 49% of those requested complied and provided a sample. Results can be used to inform burden of illness and source attribution studies and indicate that AGI continues to be an important public health issue in Canada.