Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2013)

Emergency Department Visit Data for Rapid Detection and Monitoring of Norovirus Activity, United States

  • Brian Rha,
  • Sherry Burrer,
  • Soyoun Park,
  • Tarak Trivedi,
  • Umesh D. Parashar,
  • Benjamin A. Lopman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1908.130483
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
pp. 1214 – 1221

Abstract

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Noroviruses are the leading cause of gastroenteritis in the United States, but timely measures of disease are lacking. BioSense, a national-level electronic surveillance system, assigns data on chief complaints (patient symptoms) collected during emergency department (ED) visits to 78 subsyndromes in near real-time. In a series of linear regression models, BioSense visits mapped by chief complaints of diarrhea and nausea/vomiting subsyndromes as a monthly proportion of all visits correlated strongly with reported norovirus outbreaks from 6 states during 2007–2010. Higher correlations were seen for diarrhea (R = 0.828–0.926) than for nausea/vomiting (R = 0.729–0.866) across multiple age groups. Diarrhea ED visit proportions exhibited winter seasonality attributable to norovirus; rotavirus contributed substantially for children <5 years of age. Diarrhea ED visit data estimated the onset, peak, and end of norovirus season within 4 weeks of observed dates and could be reliable, timely indicators of norovirus activity.

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