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Medical care capacity for influenza outbreaks, Los Angeles. (Research).


In December 1997, media reported hospital overcrowding overcrowding

overcrowding of animal accommodation. Many countries now publish codes of practice which define what the appropriate volumetric allowances should be for each species of animal when they are housed indoors. Breaches of these codes is overcrowding.
 and "the worst [flu epidemic] in the past two decades" in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  County (LAC). We found that rates of pneumonia and influenza influenza or flu, acute, highly contagious disease caused by a virus; formerly known as the grippe. There are three types of the virus, designated A, B, and C, but only types A and B cause more serious contagious infections.  deaths, hospitalizations, and claims were substantially higher for the 1997-98 influenza season than the previous six seasons. Hours of emergency medical services An Emergency medical service (abbreviated to initialism "EMS" in many countries) is a service providing out-of-hospital acute care and transport to definitive care, to patients with illnesses and injuries which the patient believes constitutes a medical emergency.  (EMS) diversion (when emergency departments could not receive incoming patients) peaked during the influenza seasons studied; the number of EMS diversion hours per season also increased during the seasons 1993-94 to 1997-98, suggesting a decrease in medical care capacity during influenza seasons. Over the seven influenza seasons studied, the number of licensed beds decreased 12%, while the LAC population increased 5%. Our findings suggest that the capacity of health-care systems to handle patient visits during influenza seasons is diminishing.

**********

In December 1997, television and newspaper media reported that high numbers of patients seeking treatment for respiratory illnesses Noun 1. respiratory illness - a disease affecting the respiratory system
respiratory disease, respiratory disorder

adult respiratory distress syndrome, ARDS, wet lung, white lung - acute lung injury characterized by coughing and rales; inflammation of the
 had overwhelmed o·ver·whelm  
tr.v. o·ver·whelmed, o·ver·whelm·ing, o·ver·whelms
1. To surge over and submerge; engulf: waves overwhelming the rocky shoreline.

2.
a.
 the capacity of emergency departments and outpatient facilities in Los Angeles County (LAC). The situation was described as a looming looming: see mirage.  health-care disaster (1) and the worst influenza epidemic influenza epidemic

caused 500,000 deaths in U.S. alone (1918–1919). [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 403]

See : Disease
 in the previous 2 decades (2,3).

Influenza viruses influenza virus
n.
Any of three viruses of the genus Influenzavirus designated type A, type B, and type C, that cause influenza and influenzalike infections.
 infect infect /in·fect/ (in-fekt´)
1. to invade and produce infection in.

2. to transmit a pathogen or disease to.


in·fect
v.
1.
 all age groups and cause annual or near-annual winter epidemics. The health impact of seasonal epidemics is variable, averaging >20,000 excess deaths (i.e., deaths above an expected baseline of deaths in the absence of influenza) and >110,000 excess hospitalizations per year in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  (4). Severe influenza seasons can result in >40,000 excess deaths and >200,000 excess hospitalizations.

Global pandemics of influenza, which occur when novel influenza viruses emerge, happen unpredictably and less frequently (e.g., 1918-19, 1957-58, and 1968-69 in the 20th century) than seasonal epidemics (5). However, the resulting elevation in the number of illnesses and deaths can be much greater than during regular influenza epidemics (4,6). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) projected that a pandemic pandemic /pan·dem·ic/ (pan-dem´ik)
1. a widespread epidemic of a disease.

2. widely epidemic.


pan·dem·ic
adj.
Epidemic over a wide geographic area.

n.
 similar in impact to the 1957 pandemic, widely considered to be a "medium" pandemic, might result in approximately 300,000 to 750,000 excess hospitalizations and 18 million to 42 million excess outpatient visits in the United States (7).

In December 1997, the LAC Acute Communicable Disease communicable disease
n.
A disease that is transmitted through direct contact with an infected individual or indirectly through a vector. Also called contagious disease.
 Unit, the California Department of Health Services Department of Health Services may refer to:
  • Los Angeles County Department of Health Services
  • California Department of Health Services a California state agency
, and CDC conducted a preliminary investigation of situations in which patients were diverted from one emergency facility to another in LAC. Because findings suggested that approximately 65% of LAC health-care facilities had diverted patients to other hospitals because of overcrowding and concerns about the hospitals' ability to respond to seasonal and pandemic influenza, we studied the impact of the 1997-98 influenza season on LAC hospitals and emergency services emergency services Emergency care '…services …necessary to prevent death or serious impairment of health and, because of the danger to life or health, require the use of the most accessible hospital available and equipped to furnish those services' .

Methods

Study Population

The entire population of LAC was used as the denominator denominator

the bottom line of a fraction; the base population on which population rates such as birth and death rates are calculated.

denominator 
 to estimate death rates from pneumonia and influenza (P&I) and the number of licensed beds per 100,000 persons. Six publicly funded LAC hospitals and six Kaiser Permanente Kaiser Permanente is an integrated managed care organization, based in Oakland, California, founded in 1945 by industrialist Henry J. Kaiser and physician Sidney R. Garfield.  Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region,  (KPSC KPSC Kentucky Public Service Commission
KPSC Karnataka Public Service Commission
) hospitals were used to study hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
 patterns. KPSC is a not-for-profit group model health maintenance organization in southern California. Rates of hospitalizations in LAC-funded facilities and KPSC were calculated by using population estimates for persons at or below the poverty level (8) and the KPSC enrollee population, respectively. LAC-funded hospitals and KPSC hospitals ranged in size from approximately 100 to 2,000 licensed beds and from approximately 100 to 600 beds, respectively.

Study Periods

Seven influenza seasons (from 1991 to 1998) were studied. A broad 24-week influenza season was defined as the last 12 weeks of 1 year and the first 12 weeks of the following year. Within each season, we further defined a peak influenza period as the 4-consecutive-week period in which the greatest total number of influenza isolates and antigen detections were reported to the U.S. World Health Organization (WHO) influenza laboratories in Region IX (California, Washington, Oregon, and Hawaii). The peak influenza periods were defined independently of hospitalization, KPSC claims, or emergency medical services (EMS) data.

P&I death data for LAC were obtained from the California Department of Health Services Vital Statistics Section. A P&I death was defined with a code 480-487, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9). These ICD-9 codes The following is a list of codes for International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems. These codes are in the public domain.
See also
 include viral pneumonia viral pneumonia Pulmonology Pneumonia of viral origin, which is more severe in the very young and very old Common pathogens Adenovirus, influenza virus, parainfluenza virus, RSV, rhinovirus, HS, CMV. See Influenza, Pneumonia, Respiratory syncytial virus. , pneumococcal pneumonia Pneumococcal Pneumonia Definition

Pneumococcal pneumonia is a common but serious infection and inflammation of the lungs. It is caused by the bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae.
, other bacterial pneumonia Bacterial pneumonia is an infection of the lungs by bacteria.

See pneumonia for a general overview of pneumonia and its other causes.

Streptococcus pneumoniae (J13.
, pneumonia due to other specified organisms, pneumonia classified elsewhere, bronchopneumonia bronchopneumonia: see pneumonia. , pneumonia-organism unspecified, and influenza.

P&I hospitalization data were obtained directly from the six LAC-funded hospitals and KPSC. For LAC-funded hospitals, a P&I hospitalization was defined as one in which one of the first three discharge codes included ICD-9 codes 480-487 (no principal diagnosis was available). For KPSC, a P&I hospitalization was defined as a hospitalization for which the principal discharge diagnosis was assigned an ICD-9 code of 480-487. Hospital data limitations prevented us from using an identical P&I hospitalization definition for both the LAC and KPSC facilities. Hospitalization data included the facility name and the patient's sex, age, discharge date, and disposition at discharge.

Data from claims related to P&I hospitalizations (ICD-9 480-487) were obtained from KPSC. A claim is a bill or charge generated by an outside facility when a KPSC patient receives a medical service (e.g., a radiograph radiograph /ra·dio·graph/ (-graf?) the film produced by radiography.

ra·di·o·graph
n.
 or administration of a medication) while hospitalized at a non-KPSC facility. Claims usually are generated when a KPSC facility is diverting patients or when a KPSC patient is too sick to be transported to another KPSC facility. Since a separate claim is generated for each service, one hospitalization usually results in multiple claims. These data, therefore, were analyzed separately from the hospitalization data.

A hospital was considered to be on EMS diversion when its emergency department could not receive incoming patients transported by an Advanced Life Support (ALS Als (äls), Ger. Alsen, island, 121 sq mi (313 sq km), Sønderjylland co., S Denmark, in the Lille Bælt, separated from the mainland by the narrow Alensund. ) unit. The number of hours that LAC emergency rooms were on diversion for March 1993 to March 1998 was obtained through the LAC Local Emergency Medical Service Agency (LEMSA LEMSA Local Emergency Medical Services Agency ). Data were not available for periods before March 1993. Under California statute, all ALS diversions require LEMSA approval. LEMSA may deny such requests during periods when regional patient volume is high and extended transport time may have a negative health effect on patients (9). This study analyzed only EMS diversions because of emergency department saturation.

We obtained the total number of general acute-care facilities in LAC and licensed beds in each facility, for 1991 to 1997, from data compiled by the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development, California Department of Health Services (unpub. data). Licensed beds are those licensed to a particular facility regardless of availability for patient care; the total was obtained from the number of beds that appeared on each facility's license on the last day of the calendar year. Staffed beds are those available for patient care based on current staffing levels. Reliable numbers on staffed beds were unavailable.

Statistical Methods

Rates of P&I deaths, P&I hospitalizations at LAC-funded facilities and KPSC hospitals, and KPSC claims were calculated for each influenza season from 1991-92 to 1997-98. Rates of P&I deaths, hospitalizations, and KPSC claims during the 4-week peak influenza period were compared with the rates for the remaining 20 weeks of the influenza season by the Mantel-Haenszel common odds ratio (OR) in Stat-Xact 3.0 (10). In addition, rates of P&I-associated deaths, hospitalizations, and KPSC claims during the peak influenza period of 1997-98 were compared with the rates in the other six peak periods (1991-92 through 1996-97). Person-week denominators were calculated for peak and nonpeak influenza seasons by using LAC population for each given year and the number of weeks in the period studied (for peak period, 4 weeks; for nonpeak periods, 20 weeks).

Results

In 1997-98, the 4-week period with the most influenza detections was 52-2 (i.e., weeks 52 and 53 in 1997; weeks 1 and 2 in 1998), when a total of 445 viral isolations and positive antigen tests were reported (Table 1). Most of the other peak periods also occurred in late December and early January.

During each of the seven influenza seasons studied, rates of P&I deaths were consistently higher in the 4-week peak influenza period than the other 20 weeks of each influenza season (OR 1.57; 95% confidence interval confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 [CI] 1.50 to 1.64; p<0.001) (Table 2). The rate of P&I deaths during the 1997-98 peak influenza period (16.3 deaths per million person-weeks) was significantly higher (p<0.001) than the rates in the other six peak periods (6.9-12.3 deaths per million person-weeks).

At the LAC-funded facilities, rates of P&I hospitalizations were also consistently higher during the 4-week peak influenza period than in the other 20 weeks in the influenza season (OR 1.47; 95% CI 1.39 to 1.55; p<0.001) (Table 2). The rate of P&I hospitalizations during the 1997-98 peak period (75.3 hospitalizations per million person-weeks) was significantly higher than the rates during the six other peak periods (20.6-31.8 hospitalizations per million person-weeks) (OR 1.62; 95% CI 1.44 to 1.83; p<0.001).

The rates of P&I hospitalizations and claims in the Kaiser facilities during the 4-week peak periods were significantly higher than rates of P&I hospitalizations and claims during the nonpeak periods (OR 1.63; 95% CI 1.55 to 1.71; p<0.001 for P&I hospitalizations; OR 2.05; 95% CI 1.97 to 2.13; p<0.001 for P&I claims) (Table 2).

Similar to LAC-funded facilities, the rate of P&I hospitalizations in the Kaiser facilities during the 1997-98 peak influenza period was higher than the rate of P&I hospitalizations during the previous six peak periods (OR 1.48; 95% CI 1.3 to 1.64; p<0.001 hospitalizations; OR 4.01; 95% CI 3.75 to 4.29; p<0.001 for P&I claims) (Table 2). In the 1997-98 season, the rate was 84 hospitalizations per million person-weeks, compared with 40-75 hospitalizations per million person-weeks for the previous years studied. The number and rate of KPSC claims were also higher during the peak influenza period of 1997-98 (266 claims per million person-weeks) compared with previous years (range 6-135 claims per million person-weeks) (OR 4.0; 95% CI 3.75 to 4.29; p<0.001).

In the 1997-98 peak influenza period, the largest number and percentage of P&I hospitalizations occurred in persons >60 years of age (n=491, 45%), followed by persons <5 years of age (n=166, 15%). This general age distribution was observed in all seven peak influenza periods, but the absolute number of patients was greater for the 1997-98 peak period than for any of the other peak periods.

The months with the highest number of EMS diversion hours were December 1997 (10,109 hours) and January 1998 (11,388 hours). These months coincided with the peak of the 1997-98 influenza period. From the 1993-94 to the 1997-98 influenza seasons, the number of hours that all LAC hospital emergency departments were on EMS diversion during each December to February (months encompassing all but one of the 4-week influenza peaks) increased from 15,844 hours to 25,584 hours (Figure 1). For comparison, an average of 3,715 EMS diversion hours per month occurred during noninfluenza months in years 1993-1996. Influenza hospitalizations (KPSC and county-funded facilities) and peaks in influenza detections in Figure 1 show the relationship between EMS diversions and influenza activity.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

From 1991 to 1997, the number of acute-care hospitals and licensed acute-care hospital beds in LAC decreased from 137 to 130 hospitals and 29,987 to 26,244 licensed beds, respectively. The drop in licensed beds corresponds to a decrease of 334 beds per 100,000 persons to 227 beds per 100,000 persons (Figure 2). Accurate counts of staffed beds were not available.

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

Discussion

Several important patterns were observed in this study of LAC hospitalizations and EMS diversion during influenza seasons in LAC from 1991 through 1998. The impact of the influenza season on LAC hospitals was more severe in 1997-98 than in the preceding 6 years. However, although more severe, the elevated levels of hospitalizations and deaths were not unique. In six of seven winters from 1991-92 through 1997-98, similar peaks of P&I hospitalizations and P&I deaths were observed. These peaks correlated with elevated levels of circulating influenza viruses, suggesting that this infection is a key factor leading to increased demands on medical systems in the winter. The study also demonstrated that the number of hours that LAC hospitals were on EMS diversions peaked at approximately the same time that respiratory deaths and hospitalizations peaked. Most importantly Adv. 1. most importantly - above and beyond all other consideration; "above all, you must be independent"
above all, most especially
, the number of hours that LAC hospitals were on EMS diversion during the peak influenza periods increased substantially over the period of the study. During this period, the LAC population increased, while the number of licensed hospital beds in LAC decreased. If an increasing trend in EMS diversion hours reflects the inability of hospitals to handle critically ill patients, then these contemporaneous con·tem·po·ra·ne·ous  
adj.
Originating, existing, or happening during the same period of time: the contemporaneous reigns of two monarchs. See Synonyms at contemporary.
 patterns call into question the capability of current medical systems to handle regular influenza seasons, as well as more stressful events, such as pandemic influenza.

Our evidence suggests that influenza infections were the major precipitating pre·cip·i·tate  
v. pre·cip·i·tat·ed, pre·cip·i·tat·ing, pre·cip·i·tates

v.tr.
1. To throw from or as if from a great height; hurl downward:
 cause for the annual winter upsurge in patient visits. In this study, we defined the 4-week peak influenza periods on the basis of the number of influenza isolates reported to WHO laboratories in Region IX, not on the basis of hospitalization or death patterns. During these peak influenza periods, levels of respiratory-related deaths, hospitalizations (at both the LAC-funded and KPSC hospitals), and claims for KPSC patients were substantially higher than during the periods when influenza viruses were not in circulation. The patients most frequently hospitalized for P&I-related illnesses (ICD-9 codes 480-487) during the peak influenza weeks were the elderly and the young, a pattern consistent with the epidemiology of influenza. Finally, the number of EMS diversion hours in the 1994-95 season, characterized by light influenza activity, was notably low.

One of the characteristics of influenza epidemics is a highly variable impact on populations. The degree of impact depends on several factors, including prevalence of infections, levels of protective immunity in the population, demographic and health characteristics of the population, and circulating strain. The increased severity of the 1997-98 influenza season was likely due to the appearance of influenza A/Sydney/5/ 97-like (H3N2) viruses in the United States. This virus, a drift variant of the previously predominant influenza A/Wuhan/ 359/95 (H3N2) virus strain, first emerged in the spring of 1997 and quickly became the predominant influenza strain in the United States and worldwide (11). During the 1997-98 influenza season, this strain accounted for >90% of the influenza virus isolates from Southern California. However, because of the timing of its emergence, this strain was not included in the 1997-98 influenza vaccine influenza vaccine Flu vaccine A vaccine recommended for those at high risk for serious complications from influenza: > age 65; Pts with chronic diseases of heart, lung or kidneys, DM, immunosuppression, severe anemia, nursing home and other chronic-care  (12).

The most important observation in our study was the increasing trend in EMS diversion hours during peak influenza periods. One factor in this trend appeared to be a steady erosion in hospital bed capacity despite a growing population in LAC. From 1991 to 1997, the bed capacity in LAC decreased by 17%, when population growth was taken into account. Concomitantly con·com·i·tant  
adj.
Occurring or existing concurrently; attendant. See Synonyms at contemporary.

n.
One that occurs or exists concurrently with another.
, from 1993-94 through 1997-98, EMS diversion hours combined during the months of December, January, and February increased from 15,844 to 25,584 hours. Since EMS diversion hours reflect times when hospitals are unable to receive critically ill patients, such hours serve as a marker of general overcrowding in emergency rooms and time during which patients are at risk for long waits and poor outcomes (13).

Our findings suggest that decreasing bed capacity was an important underlying cause for hospitals' inability to handle the upsurges in patients and the increasing numbers of hours spent on EMS diversions during the influenza seasons studied. However, we did not examine other potentially important factors, such as nursing shortages, staff illnesses, or limitations in the availability of equipment or intensive-care unit capacity. In a recent study in the emergency rooms in the United States, 14 common causes of emergency room overcrowding were identified, of which 43% were directly related to resource shortages, such as beds and staff (13). In a similar survey of emergency department directors in California, 96% of the directors reported overcrowding as a problem and identified increasing numbers of severely ill patients, hospital bed shortages, delays in receiving laboratory results, and nursing shortages as underlying causes (14).

These findings have two important implications. First, the near-annual peaking of both P&I hospitalizations and EMS diversions during the influenza season suggests that hospitals and medical systems can and should develop plans to handle the upsurges in patient visits for respiratory illnesses. Second, the increasing number of EMS diversion hours suggests the need to further identify reversible reversible,
adj capable of going through a series of changes in either direction, forward or backward (e.g., reversible chemical reaction).

reversible hydrocolloid,
n See hydrocolloid, reversible.
 factors responsible for the ongoing erosion in the ability of LAC hospitals to handle upsurges in patient visits.

One important aspect of this study was our decision to restrict the analysis of hospitalizations, KPSC claims, and deaths to ICD ICD International Classification of Diseases (of the World Health Organization); intrauterine contraceptive device.

ICD
abbr.
9 codes 480-487--codes often used to monitor influenza trends (15). In further analyses (not shown), we found that the rates of hospitalizations increased twofold when additional respiratory codes were added and almost threefold when congestive heart failure congestive heart failure, inability of the heart to expel sufficient blood to keep pace with the metabolic demands of the body. In the healthy individual the heart can tolerate large increases of workload for a considerable length of time.  was included. Other studies have shown that hospitalizations for other respiratory conditions (e.g., bronchitis bronchitis (brŏnkī`tĭs), inflammation of the mucous membrane of the bronchial tubes. It can be caused by viral or bacterial infections or by allergic reactions to irritants such as tobacco smoke. , chronic airway obstruction chronic airway obstruction,
n a persistent or recurring condition that impedes normal breathing. See also disease, chronic obstructive airways.
) and congestive heart failure increase during influenza season (16). These considerations suggest that our analysis of the magnitude of the problem was conservative.

In response to the 1997-98 influenza season, the California Department of Health Services, in collaboration with Kaiser Permanente and the CDC, augmented active influenza surveillance in California. Methods for influenza surveillance were expanded to include monitoring of influenza-related hospitalizations and use of influenza antiviral antiviral /an·ti·vi·ral/ (-vi´ral) destroying viruses or suppressing their replication, or an agent that so acts.

an·ti·vi·ral
adj.
 medications. In addition, surveillance of influenza-like illnesses in outpatient settings and collection of respiratory virus isolation data from several major laboratories throughout the state were also implemented.

Emergency room crowding and diversion is a year-round problem caused by multiple factors within the medical system (13,17). Our study shows that influenza places an additional stress on an overburdened o·ver·bur·den  
tr.v. o·ver·bur·dened, o·ver·bur·den·ing, o·ver·bur·dens
1. To burden with too much weight; overload.

2. To subject to an excessive burden or strain; overtax.

n.
1.
 system. Although we did not study hospitals outside LAC, we think that the situation in LAC is not unique. During the 1997-98 influenza season, media in northern California Northern California, sometimes referred to as NorCal, is the northern portion of the U.S. state of California. The region contains the San Francisco Bay Area, the state capital, Sacramento; as well as the substantial natural beauty of the redwood forests, the northern  suggested a similar pattern there (18). Furthermore, in January 2000, the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times reported emergency rooms were "flooded" secondary to influenza-like illnesses (19).

The ability to handle upsurges in patients is compromised in at least some parts of the country. Action is needed to reverse this situation. Because of the 1997-98 influenza season, the Healthcare Association of Southern California, a health-care industry organization, made the following recommendations for hospitals during periods of heavy influenza activity: 1) reduce or eliminate elective surgery elective surgery Surgery Any operation that can be performed with advanced planning–eg, cholecystectomy, hernia repair, colonic resection, coronary artery bypass ; 2) relax staff-versus-patient ratios by working with state licensing agencies; 3) develop methods of identifying and mobilizing additional staff during the winter; 4) establish walk-in influenza clinics to triage triage

Division of patients for priority of care, usually into three categories: those who will not survive even with treatment; those who will survive without treatment; and those whose survival depends on treatment.
 and treat patients at lower cost; and 5) develop methods for identifying additional equipment (20). This health-care association also recommended influenza immunization programs In the 1950s, medical breakthroughs resulted in new vaccines to combat such diseases as polio and measles. States responded by requiring mandatory immunization for schoolchildren. One result was the near eradication of diseases that had previously been crippling or fatal.  for staff members and their families early in the season. Implementing such recommendations could alleviate some of the stresses experienced by medical systems in years of increased influenza outbreaks.

Ontario, Canada, implemented a program in 2000-01 that offered influenza vaccines to all its residents to alleviate pressures on its hospitals (21). The results of this approach may not be known for several years. The importance of vaccinating persons at high risk for influenza-related complications cannot be overemphasized. This step should be widely implemented to reduce hospitalizations and other serious complications of influenza (22). Finally, hospitals should also work closely with local and state health departments to obtain up-to-date information about the local circulation of influenza viruses. Such information could be used by hospitals to trigger the implementation of predesignated policies.

Conclusion

Rebuilding the medical care capacity to handle such patient upsurges will be difficult and expensive. Hospitals in LAC regularly and increasingly exceed their capacity to handle respiratory illness cases. This lack of capacity, along with concerns about the next influenza pandemic
    Note: For information about the content, tone and sourcing of this article, please see the tags at the bottom of this page.

An influenza pandemic
 and potential terrorist events, suggests that it is time to start this process.
Table 1. Peak period of influenza detections (a) reported to the World
Health Organization's influenza laboratories, U.S. Region IX, 1991-1998

                                             Influenza season

                                      1991-92    1992-93    1993-94

Peak no. of influenza detections/      192         57        173
4-wk period (% positive)               (28)       (10)       (26)

Peak 4-wk period week no.               2-5      53 (b)-3    52-3

                                             Influenza season

                                      1994-95    1995-96    1996-97

Peak no. of influenza detections/       61         164        117
4-wk period (% positive)               (13)        (21)       (22)

Peak 4-wk period week no.              9-12        51-2       51-2

                                             Influenza season

                                      1997-98

Peak no. of influenza detections/       445
4-wk period (% positive)                (27)

Peak 4-wk period week no.             52 (b)-2

(a) Includes viral isolations and positive antigen tests.

(b) Year extended over 53 weeks.
Table 2. Rates of pneumonia and influenza (P&I) deaths,
hospitalizations, and claims (a)

                                     P&I deaths

Influenza period by
season                    Count     Person-wks (d)     Rate

Peak 4-wk period
  91-92                    345            36            9.5
  92-93                    287            37            7.8
  93-94                    457            37           12.3
  94-95                    257            37            6.9
  95-96                    348            37            9.3
  96-97                    333            38            8.8
  97-98                    624            38           16.3

Nonpeak 20-wk period
  91-92                  1,177           182            6.5
  92-93                  1,044           184            5.7
  93-94                  1,252           186            6.7
  94-95                  1,081           187            5.8
  95-96                  1,126           187            6.0
  96-97                  1,319           189            7.0
  97-98                  1,453           192            7.6

                              LAC hospitalizations (b)

Influenza period by
season                    Count     Person-wks (d)     Rate

Peak 4-wk period
  91-92                    157            8            20.6
  92-93                    172            8            21.7
  93-94                    277            9            31.8
  94-95                    214            9            23.6
  95-96                    246            9            27.4
  96-97                    192            9            22.6
  97-98                    648            9            75.3

Nonpeak 20-wk period
  91-92                    570           38            15.0
  92-93                    796           40            20.1
  93-94                    737           44            16.9
  94-95                    924           45            20.4
  95-96                    710           45            15.8
  96-97                    808           43            19.0
  97-98                  1,610           43            37.4

                              KPSC hospitalizations (c)

Influenza period by
season                    Count     Person-wks (d)     Rate

Peak 4-wk period
  91-92                    262            5            52.4
  92-93                    235            5            48.5
  93-94                    355            5            75.2
  94-95                    190            5            40.5
  95-96                    330            5            67.3
  96-97                    308            5            58.1
  97-98                    482            6            84.3

Nonpeak 20-wk period
  91-92                  1,065           25            42.6
  92-93                    976           24            40.3
  93-94                    955           24            40.5
  94-95                    915           23            39.0
  95-96                    931           25            38.0
  96-97                    882           27            33.3
  97-98                    927           29            32.4

                                     KPSC claims

Influenza period by
season                   Count     Person-wks (d)     Rate

Peak 4-wk period
  91-92                     32            5             6.4
  92-93                    148            5            30.5
  93-94                    257            5            54.5
  94-95                    239            5            51.0
  95-96                    564            5           115.0
  96-97                    715            5           134.8
  97-98                    1,0            6           265.9

Nonpeak 20-wk period
  91-92                     78           25             3.1
  92-93                    542           24            22.4
  93-94                    618           24            26.2
  94-95                    947           23            40.4
  95-96                  1,419           25            57.9
  96-97                  2,338           27            88.2
  97-98                  2,548           29            89.1

(a) Abbreviations used: LAC, Los Angeles County; KPSC, Kaiser
Permanente Southern California.

(b) Represents six LAC-funded hospitals.

(c) Represents six KPSC hospitals.

(d) Represents 1 million person-weeks.


Acknowledgments

We thank Sandra Gross-Schulman, Eugene Hurwitz, and Robert Murray Robert Murray is the name of:
  • Rob Murray (born 1967), Canadian ice hockey player
  • Robbie Murray (born 1976), Irish boxer
  • Robert Murray (footballer) (born 1915), Scottish footballer
  • Robert Murray (merchant) (1721-1786), American merchant and Manhattan resident
 for their assistance in the field investigation. We thank Diana Petitti, Jim Winter, and Shahla Yaghmai for providing data. We also thank Mike Ascher, Tim Uyeki, and Alicia Postema for their careful review of the manuscript.

References

(1.) Marquis J. State's hospitals suffer critical nurse shortage. LA Times 1998 Jan 16; Sect. A:21. Available from: URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: http://www.latimes.com

(2.) Roan S roan

a coat color consisting of a relatively uniform mixture of white and colored hairs, giving a 'silvered' hue; self-describing colors are red-roan, blue-roan, chestnut roan.
. Flu may catch (achoo!). LA Times 1998 Jan 26; Sect. S sect.
abbr.
1. section

2. sectional
:1. Available from: URL: http://www.latimes.com

(3.) Colker D. Valley hospitals packed due to rash of illnesses. LA Times 1997 Dec 31; Sect. B:6. Available from: URL: http://www.latimes.com

(4.) Simonson L, Clarke M J, Williamson GD, Stroup DF, Arden NH, Schonberger LB. The impact of influenza epidemics on mortality: introducing a severity index. Am J Public Health 1997;87:1944-50.

(5.) Cox NJ, Fukuda K. Influenza. Infect Dis Clin North Am 1998;12:27-38.

(6.) Glezen WP. Serious morbidity and mortality Morbidity and Mortality can refer to:
  • Morbidity & Mortality, a term used in medicine
  • Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a medical publication
See also
  • Morbidity, a medical term
  • Mortality, a medical term
 associated with influenza epidemics. Epidemiol Rev 1982;4:25-44.

(7.) Meltzer MI, Cox NJ, Fukuda K. The economic impact of pandemic influenza in the United States: priorities for intervention. Emerg Infect Dis 1999;5:659-71.

(8.) United Way of Greater Los Angeles (CA). State of the County Report, Los Angeles 1998-99. Los Angeles (CA): United Way of Greater Los Angeles; 1999. Available from: URL: http://unitedwayla.org/pfdfiles/ StateofCountyFinal.pdf

(9.) Los Angeles County Department of Health Services The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services (DHS) in Los Angeles County's department providing public and personal health services to the over 10 million residents in the County.  (CA). Guidelines for hospitals requesting diversion of ALS units. In: Prehospital care policy manual. Los Angeles (CA): Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. Reference No. 503. Available from: URL: http:// www.ladhs.org/ems/policies/policies.htm#index

(10.) StatXact 3 for Windows user manual. Cambridge, MA: Cytel Software; 1995.

(11.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Update: influenza activity-United States and worldwide, 1997-98 season, and composition of the 1997-98 influenza vaccine. MMWR MMWR Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report Epidemiology A news bulletin published by the CDC, which provides epidemiologic data–eg, statistics on the incidence of AIDS, rabies, rubella, STDs and other communicable diseases, causes of mortality–eg,  Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 1998;47:280-4.

(12.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Update: influenza activity-United States, 1997-98 season. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 1998;47:196-200.

(13.) Derlet RW, Richards JR. Overcrowding in the nation's emergency departments: complex causes and disturbing effects. Ann Emerg Med 2000;35:63-8.

(14.) Richards JR, Navarro ML, Derlet RW. Survey of directors of emergency departments in California on overcrowding. West J Med 2000;172:385-8.

(15.) Barker WH. Excess pneumonia and influenza associated hospitalization during influenza epidemics in the United States, 1970-78. Am J Public Health 1986;76:761-5.

(16.) McBean AM, Babish JD, Warren JL. The impact and cost of influenza in the elderly. Arch Intern intern /in·tern/ (in´tern) a medical graduate serving in a hospital preparatory to being licensed to practice medicine.

in·tern or in·terne
n.
 Med 1993;153:2105-11.

(17.) Redelmeier DA, Blair P J, Collins WE. No place to unload To remove a program from memory or take a tape or disk out of its drive. : a preliminary analysis of the prevalence, risk factors, and consequences of ambulance diversions. Ann Emerg Med 1994;23:43-7.

(18.) Gurnon E. Emergency rooms face onslaught of flu cases. San Francisco Examiner The San Francisco Examiner is a U.S. daily newspaper. It has been published continuously in San Francisco, California, since the late 19th Century. History
19th century
The beginning of the Examiner is a topic of some controversy.
 1998 Jan 27; Sect. A-4. Available from: URL: http:// www.examiner.com

(19.) Steinhauer J. Flu cases jam the E.R. and empty the office. New York Times 2000 Jan 5; Metropolitan Desk section. Available from: URL: http://www.nytimes.com

(20.) Healthcare Association of Southern California. 1999 flu outbreaks: contingency planning for hospitals. Los Angeles (CA): HASC HASC House Armed Services Committee
HASC Hospital Association of Southern California
HASC Hebrew Academy for Special Children
HASC Hierarchical Administrative Subdivision Codes (international post codes) 
; 1998.

(21.) Schabas RE. Mass influenza vaccination vaccination, means of producing immunity against pathogens, such as viruses and bacteria, by the introduction of live, killed, or altered antigens that stimulate the body to produce antibodies against more dangerous forms.  in Ontario: a sensible move. CMAJ CMAJ Canadian Medical Association Journal  2001;164:36-7.

(22.) Nordin J, Mullooly J, Poblete S, Strikas R, Petrucci R, Wei F, et al. Influenza vaccine effectiveness in preventing hospitalizations and deaths in persons 65 years or older in Minnesota, New York, and Oregon: data from 3 health plans. J Infect Dis 2001;184:665-70.

Dr. Glaser is the medical officer in the Viral and Rickettsial Disease Noun 1. rickettsial disease - infectious disease caused by ticks or mites or body lice infected with rickettsial bacteria
rickettsiosis

infectious disease - a disease transmitted only by a specific kind of contact
 Laboratory, Division of Communicable Disease Control in California's State Health Department. She oversees a statewide encephalitis encephalitis (ĕnsĕf'əlī`təs), general term used to describe a diffuse inflammation of the brain and spinal cord, usually of viral origin, often transmitted by mosquitoes, in contrast to a bacterial infection of the meninges  project and is involved with an influenza surveillance project in California. She also serves as an assistant adjunct professor in the Pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.

pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics.
 Infectious Disease Infectious disease

A pathological condition spread among biological species. Infectious diseases, although varied in their effects, are always associated with viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, multicellular parasites and aberrant proteins known as prions.
 Division, University of California, San Francisco Coordinates:  .

Carol A. Glaser, * Sabrina Gilliam, * William W. Thompson, ([dagger]) David E. Dassey, ([double dagger double dagger
n.
A reference mark () used in printing and writing. Also called diesis.

Noun 1.
]) Stephen H. Waterman, * Mitchell Saruwatari, ([double dagger]) Stanley Shapiro, ([section]) and Keiji Fukudat ([dagger])

* California Department of Health Services, Richmond, California, USA; ([dagger]) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; ([double dagger]) County of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA; and ([section]) Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

Address for correspondence: Carol A. Glaser, Viral and Rickettsial Disease Laboratory, California Department of Health Services, 85 Marina Bay Marina Bay may refer to the following places:

In Gibraltar
  • Marina Bay, Gibraltar
In Singapore
  • Marina Bay, Singapore
In the United States
  • Marina Bay, Richmond, California
 Parkway, Richmond, CA 94804, USA; fax: 510-307-8599; e-mail: cglaser@dhs.ca.gov
COPYRIGHT 2002 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Fukuda, Keiji
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2002
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