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Mortality and influenza

W P Glezen, A A Payne, D N Snyder

    The Journal of Infectious Diseases
    |September 1, 1982
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Influenza virus activity consistently drives respiratory illness and pneumonia/influenza deaths during epidemic seasons. Accurate influenza surveillance is crucial for precise mortality estimations.

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    Area of Science:

    • * Epidemiology
    • * Infectious Diseases
    • * Public Health

    Background:

    • * Influenza virus infections are a significant cause of seasonal respiratory illness and mortality.
    • * Accurate assessment of influenza's impact on mortality is essential for public health interventions.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • * To analyze the relationship between influenza virus activity and acute respiratory illness (ARI) and mortality peaks.
    • * To evaluate the accuracy of baseline mortality prediction methods in the context of influenza epidemics.

    Main Methods:

    • * Systematic virologic surveillance in Houston over seven years.
    • * Correlation analysis of influenza virus activity peaks with ARI peaks and mortality data.
    • * Comparison of observed mortality patterns with predicted baseline mortality.

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    Main Results:

    • * Influenza virus activity was epidemic each respiratory disease season.
    • * Peaks in ARI and subsequent mortality (pneumonia/influenza) consistently followed influenza activity peaks.
    • * Mortality increases were absent without concurrent influenza virus activity.

    Conclusions:

    • * Influenza virus activity is the primary driver of excess mortality during respiratory disease seasons.
    • * Current baseline mortality prediction methods may underestimate influenza-associated deaths.
    • * Robust influenza surveillance is critical for accurate public health impact assessment.