Title: Introduction to Epidemiology of Influenza A (HINI) Infection
1Introduction to Epidemiology of Influenza A
(HINI) Infection
- Dr. Tong Ka Io
- Center for Disease Control Prevention
- 4th May, 2009
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3Outline
- Situation update
- Characteristics of the disease
- Risk assessment
- Preventive measures
4Situation Update
5Influenza A (H1N1) human cases (2009.05.04)
Confirmed Deaths
Mexico 590 25
US 226 1
Canada 85
20 other countries 985 26
6Situation in Mexico
- Jan to Mar 11 all samples reconfirmed to be
negative - Mar 15/17 1st probable/confirmed case
- Apr 12 reported to WHO an ILI outbreak in a
small community (Veracruz) - Apr 17 Issued alert due to a case of atypical
pneumonia (Oaxaca) and enhanced surveillance - Apr 23 Canada HPA helped to confirm swine flu
infection and reported to WHO - Apr 27 School suspension in the whole country
- May 3 Epidemic easing
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16Asia Pacific region
- Confirmed
- New Zealand...6
- Hong Kong1
- Korea1
- Suspected
- Australia
- Thailand
- Japan
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18Characteristics of Disease
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20Virology
- H1N1
- Same virus found in Mexico and US
- A new subtype not previously detected. A large
part of the gene sequence is similar to that of
the swine flu virus in US while a small part
similar to that in Eurasia - Resistant to amantadine and rimantidine but
sensitive to oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir
(Relenza)
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23Epidemiology
Mexico US
Temporal distribution 03.15 03.28
24Number of confirmed (N 97) and probable (N
260) cases of swine-origin influenza A (H1N1)
virus (S-OIV) infectionby date of illness
onsetMexico, March 15--April 26, 2009
25Confirmed human cases of swine-origin influenza A
(H1N1) infection with known dates of illness
onsetUnited States, March 28--April 27, 2009
26Epidemiology
Mexico US
Temporal distribution A double in the number of ILI cases over the country starting from the end of March All 32 states report suspected or probable cases Clusters of severe pneumonia cases and deaths in several administrative regions Cases first found in California and Texas that are adjacent to Mexico Cases are currently found in 30 states 63 in NY, 40 in Texas, 26 in California
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30Epidemiology
Mexico US
Human distribution Confirmed cases are aged between 1-59. Fatal cases are mostly healthy people aged between 20 to 45 Fatal cases include healthcare workers and their families Confirmed cases are aged between 3-81, the median being 16. Non-healthcare workers, no contact history with pigs. The minority have travelled to Mexico but 85 are without travel history or contact history with confirmed cases.
31Number of patients and deaths from
laboratory-confirmed infection with swine-origin
influenza A (H1N1) virus (S-OIV) by age
groupMexico, April 1--27, 2009
32Places of transmission
- Families
- Medical establishments
- Schools
33Clinical manifestation
- Incubation undefined at present, estimated to be
2-7 days by US. WHO adopts the longest incubation
period of 14 days - Manifestation
- US relatively mild self-limiting ILI. Vomiting
and diarrhea are commonly seen - Mexico Mild cases are common, mostly with
symptoms of fever, cough, shortness of breath,
vomiting, diarrhea. Severe cases have rapidly
developed severe pneumonia and severe acute
respiratory disease with high fatality - Diagnosis RT-PCR on respiratory samples yields
positive results for influenza A virus but unable
to differentiate subtype
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35Symptoms in an outbreak in a New York high school
- Cough...98
- Subjective fever...96
- Fatigue..89
- Headache..82
- Sore throat82
- Runny nose82
- Chills..80
- Myalgia..80
- Nausea55
- Abdominal pain50
- Diarrhea48
- Shortness of breath48
- Joint pain46
36Mexico official sources
- 25 among patients of ILI are suspected cases
- Among which, 10 are hospitalized for observation
- Among which, 1/3 are severe cases requiring an
operation - Fatality rate approximately 1.2
37Risk Assessment
38WHO assessment
- Event fulfils all 4 criteria for public health
emergencies of international concern as defined
in IHR (2005) - Serious public health impact unusual or
unexpected international spread significant
risk of international travel or trade
restrictions - On April 25, on the advice of the Emergency
Committee, WHO's Director-General announced that
the situation constituted a public health
emergency of international concern - Recommending all countries to heighten
surveillance for unusual outbreaks of ILI and
pneumonia
39WHO assessment
- On April 27, WHO's Director-General raised the
level of influenza pandemic alert from phase 3 to
phase 4, stating - Likelihood of a pandemic has increased but not
inevitable - Virus is capable of human-to-human transmission
and community-level outbreaks. - Given the widespread presence of the virus,
containment of the outbreak is not feasible. The
current focus should be on mitigation measures.
40WHO assessment
- On April 29, WHO's Director-General raised the
level of influenza pandemic alert from phase 4 to
5 , stating - The pandemic is imminent
- All countries should immediately activate their
pandemic preparedness plans - At this stage, effective and essential measures
include heightened surveillance, early detection
and treatment of cases, and infection control in
all health facilities
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42WHO phases of pandemic alert -Phase 4
- Verified human-to-human transmission of an animal
or human-animal influenza reassortant virus able
to cause community-level outbreaks. - The ability to cause sustained disease outbreaks
in a community marks a significant upwards shift
in the risk for a pandemic. - Indicates a significant increase in risk of a
pandemic but does not necessarily mean that a
pandemic is a forgone conclusion.
43Phase 5
- Human-to-human spread of the virus into at least
two countries in one WHO region. While most
countries will not be affected at this stage - Is a strong signal that a pandemic is imminent
and that the time to finalize the organization,
communication, and implementation of the planned
mitigation measures is short.
44Phase 6 (pandemic phase)
- Community level outbreaks in at least one other
country in a different WHO region in addition to
the criteria defined in Phase 5. - Indicate that a global pandemic is under way.
45Local assessment
- More serious than SARS outbreak in Feb 2003
- With both the characteristics of flu and SARS
- Conforming to initial characteristics of a
pandemic
46Influenza A (H1N1) vs. SARS
SARS 2003.02 Influenza A (H1N1) 2009.04
Development 3 mths 1 mth
No. of suspected cases and deaths 305 infected 5 died gt2000 infected gt100 died
Scope of transmission Limited to Guangdong Spread to 3 continents and at least 8 countries
47With characteristics of flu
- Adapted for human transmission
- Rapid transmission
- Invisible transmission
- Enlarged through outbreaks in schools
48Outbreak in a New York high school
- Apr 23-24 222 sick students visited the school
nursing office - Apr 26 7 out of 9 samples tested positive for
influenza A (H1N1) - 44 preliminary confirmed cases
- Onset date Apr 20-24
- Aged between 14-21
- 68 non-Hispanic white, 16 Hispanic, 5
non-Hispanic black, 11 of other races - No travel history
- ILI symptoms. Only 1 has to be hospitalized for a
short period - Small number of students in the same school
reported having travelled to Mexico
49Number of confirmed cases ( N 44) of
swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) virus infection
in a school, by date of illness onsetNew York
City, April 2009
50With characteristic of SARS
- Causes severe acute respiratory tract infection
- Super spreaders may exist
- Enlarged through outbreaks in medical
establishments
51Clusters of severe pneumonia cases
- Cluster in San Luis Potosi involved 9 cases and 2
persons died - Cluster in Mexicali involved 3 cases and 2
persons died - Cluster in National Institute of Respiratory
Diseases (INER) involved 6 cases and 2 persons
died - Dead cases were a doctor and his daughter. The
other daughter of the doctor was hospitalized for
pneumonia - Rumour 2 interns died 6 days after being
infected
52Conforming to initial characteristics of a
pandemic
- Current situation in Mexico does not conform to
expectations for a pandemic - Rapid international and inter-continental
transmission - Initial stage (1st wave) is usually less severe
- Severe cases and fatal cases are usually the
young and prime aged
53Questions to be answered
- What is the real scope and transmission extent in
Mexico? - How many reported pneumonia cases are caused by
Influenza A (H1N1)? - Are these cases concentrated or widely dispersed?
54Questions to be answered
- Why cases in Mexico and US differ so much in the
severity? - Weakened virus?
- Super spreaders and outbreaks in medical
settings? - Lifestyles/hygiene practices?
- Level of medical services/vaccination?
- Genetic difference?
55Questions to be answered
- Can the seasonal influenza vaccine offer partial
protection? - According to US CDC, the seasonal influenza
vaccine is unlikely to provide protection for
Influenza A (H1N1) - Obviously, cases in Mexico are more severe than
those in US. Fatal cases are mostly the young and
prime aged.
56Prognosis impossible outcomes
- A false alarm. Situation was being exaggerated
- Outbreaks controlled or eliminated via public
health measures
57Prognosis possible outcomes
- Outbreaks stop by itself
- Transmission continued without touching off a
pandemic, eventually becoming part of the
seasonal influenza - Resulting in a pandemic
- Serious impact during the first wave
- Serious impact only in the second wave
582nd wave
1st wave
59Estimation for local region
- Although the origin of outbreak is distant from
Macao and there are no direct flights between the
two places, early cases may be imported at any
time - Once a pandemic has started, it will probably
enter Macao within several weeks - Since 2005, the Influenza Pandemic Preparedness
Plan and preparation in Macao is maintained at a
satisfactory level. It is believed that when
Macao is attacked by the pandemic, the impact on
health, society and economics can be reduced to a
minimum
60Preventive Measures
61Vaccines
- Vaccination is the best method of prevention
- US CDC has begun to produce specific vaccines.
However, mass production generally requires a
period of 6 months
621. Basic measures
- Keep contact with WHO, China MOH, health
departments of neighboring regions so as to
obtain the latest information - Enhance risk communication and release timely
information so as to inform all residents of the
current situation and development, and adopt
appropriate self-protection and personal hygiene
measures - Meet with the media regularly to report and
explain the outbreak development - CDC staff on duty and a 24-hr hotline in service
- Health education and promotion via the community
network - Health education and promotion by other
government departments within their scope
632. Deferment measures
- Issue travel alert and travel warning according
to situation so that residents can take
appropriate measures before, during and after
their trip - Strengthen temperature screening at all ports of
entry, paying special attention to travellers
from affected areas
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653. Early detection and isolation
- Heighten surveillance for ILI and outbreaks,
virology of influenza, pneumonia of unknown
causes - Maintain close relationship and collaboration
with WHO influenza laboratory network to increase
the ability of virus testing - Issue guidelines to public, private medical
settings and healthcare workers so as to promptly
detect and refer suspected cases - Examine and repair isolation facilities and
equipment so as to isolate suspected and
confirmed cases when necessary
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674. Measures to prevent outbreaks in high-risk
institutions
- The Health Bureau coordinates all medical
institutions to maintain good infection control - With the help of DSEJ, coordinates all schools to
perform preventive measures such as morning
inspection, temperature measurement, school
suspension for the sick, outbreak notification
better and revise contingency plans so as to
suspend school when necessary - With the help of IAS, coordinates all nurseries
to perform measures such as morning inspection,
temperature measurement, school suspension for
the sick coordinates all social facilities for
outbreak notification, better and revise
contingency plans so as to suspend social
services when necessary
685. Measures to respond to pandemic
- Health Bureau perfects and revises the Influenza
Pandemic Preparedness Plan and substantial
preparation so as to rapidly adjust functions,
allocate resources, raise capacity and rescue
patients in times of a pandemic - All relevant departments perfect and revise
preparedness plans and substantial preparation so
as to maintain basic social functions and
services in times of a pandemic
696. Restorative measures
- All relevant departments perfect and revise
post-pandemic restorative plans and preparation
for social, economic, psychological aspects so as
to achieve fast recovery of the community after
the pandemic.
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