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Predicting virologically confirmed influenza using school absences in Allegheny County,Pennsylvania, USA during the 2007‐2015 influenza seasons
Authors:Talia M. Quandelacy  Shanta Zimmer  Justin Lessler  Charles Vukotich  Rachel Bieltz  Kyra H. Grantz  David Galloway  Jonathan M. Read  Yenlik Zheteyeva  Hongjiang Gao  Amra Uzicanin  Derek A. T. Cummings
Affiliation:1. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD, USA ; 2. University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora CO, USA ; 3. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh PA, USA ; 4. University of Colorado, Denver CO, USA ; 5. University of Florida, Gainesville FL, USA ; 6. Lancaster University, Lancaster UK ; 7. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta GA, USA
Abstract:
BackgroundChildren are important in community‐level influenza transmission. School‐based monitoring may inform influenza surveillance.MethodsWe used reported weekly confirmed influenza in Allegheny County during the 2007 and 2010‐2015 influenza seasons using Pennsylvania''s Allegheny County Health Department all‐age influenza cases from health facilities, and all‐cause and influenza‐like illness (ILI)‐specific absences from nine county school districts. Negative binomial regression predicted influenza cases using all‐cause and illness‐specific absence rates, calendar week, average weekly temperature, and relative humidity, using four cross‐validations.ResultsSchool districts reported 2 184 220 all‐cause absences (2010‐2015). Three one‐season studies reported 19 577 all‐cause and 3012 ILI‐related absences (2007, 2012, 2015). Over seven seasons, 11 946 confirmed influenza cases were reported. Absences improved seasonal model fits and predictions. Multivariate models using elementary school absences outperformed middle and high school models (relative mean absolute error (relMAE) = 0.94, 0.98, 0.99). K‐5 grade‐specific absence models had lowest mean absolute errors (MAE) in cross‐validations. ILI‐specific absences performed marginally better than all‐cause absences in two years, adjusting for other covariates, but markedly worse one year.ConclusionsOur findings suggest seasonal models including K‐5th grade absences predict all‐age‐confirmed influenza and may serve as a useful surveillance tool.
Keywords:human influenza, prediction, school‐  aged children, surveillance
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