Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2013)

Use of National Pneumonia Surveillance to Describe Influenza A(H7N9) Virus Epidemiology, China, 2004–2013

  • Nijuan Xiang,
  • Fiona Havers,
  • Tao Chen,
  • Ying Song,
  • Wenxiao Tu,
  • Leilei Li,
  • Yang Cao,
  • Bo Liu,
  • Lei Zhou,
  • Ling Meng,
  • Zhiheng Hong,
  • Rui Wang,
  • Yan Niu,
  • Jianyi Yao,
  • Kaiju Liao,
  • Lianmei Jin,
  • Yanping Zhang,
  • Qun Li,
  • Marc-Alain Widdowson,
  • Zijian Feng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1911.130865
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 11
pp. 1784 – 1790

Abstract

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In mainland China, most avian influenza A(H7N9) cases in the spring of 2013 were reported through the pneumonia of unknown etiology (PUE) surveillance system. To understand the role of possible underreporting and surveillance bias in assessing the epidemiology of subtype H7N9 cases and the effect of live-poultry market closures, we examined all PUE cases reported from 2004 through May 3, 2013. Historically, the PUE system was underused, reporting was inconsistent, and PUE reporting was biased toward A(H7N9)-affected provinces, with sparse data from unaffected provinces; however, we found no evidence that the older ages of persons with A(H7N9) resulted from surveillance bias. The absolute number and the proportion of PUE cases confirmed to be A(H7N9) declined after live-poultry market closures (p<0.001), indicating that market closures might have positively affected outbreak control. In China, PUE surveillance needs to be improved.

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