Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jun 2009)

Case-based Surveillance of Influenza Hospitalizations during 2004–2008, Colorado, USA

  • Rosemary Proff,
  • Ken Gershman,
  • Dennis Lezotte,
  • Ann-Christine Nyquist

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1506.081645
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 892 – 898

Abstract

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Colorado became the first state to make laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated hospitalizations a case-based reportable condition in 2004. We summarized surveillance for influenza hospitalizations in Colorado during the first 4 recorded influenza seasons (2004–2008). We highlight the similarities and differences among influenza seasons; no 2 seasons were entirely the same. The 2005–06 influenza season had 2 distinct waves of activity (types A and B), the 2006–07 season was substantially later and milder, and 2007–08 had substantially greater influenza B activity. The case-based surveillance for influenza hospitalizations provides information regarding the time course of seasonal influenza activity, reported case numbers and population-based rates by age group and influenza virus type, and a measure of relative severity. Influenza hospitalization surveillance provides more information about seasonal influenza activity than any other surveillance measure (e.g., surveillance for influenza-like illness) currently in widespread use among states. More states should consider implementing case-based surveillance for influenza hospitalizations.

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