Patient Delay in Hospital Visiting and the Weekend Effect of Surveillance Report on Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Epidemic Parotitis in Hanzhong City, China

Joint Authors

Zeng, Ling-Xia
Wei, Jianjun
Zhu, Zhonghai
Qi, Qi

Source

Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology

Issue

Vol. 2020, Issue 2020 (31 Dec. 2020), pp.1-11, 11 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2020-05-06

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

11

Main Subjects

Biology

Abstract EN

Background.

We aimed at investigating the prevalence and associated factors of patient delay in hospital visiting and weekend effect of disease surveillance on hand-foot-and-mouth disease and epidemic parotitis/mumps.

Methods.

Daily report data on hand-foot-and-mouth disease and epidemic parotitis cases between January 1, 2014, and December 31, 2017, in Hanzhong, Shaanxi, China, were collected.

The patient delay in hospital visiting was defined by the date difference between disease onset and patient’s visit to hospital.

Differences of delayed durations and percentages were compared by using nonparametric or χ2 tests across gender, age, occupation, disease classification, epidemic and nonepidemic seasons, and years of disease onset.

Additionally, to determine whether there existed a weekend effect of disease surveillance, the mean cases reported on weekdays and weekends were also compared.

Results.

A total of 14,814 patients with hand-foot-and-mouth disease and 4013 with epidemic parotitis were recorded, respectively.

We found that 43.1% of the hand-foot-and-mouth disease and 36.5% of the epidemic parotitis patients had delayed visiting to hospital.

All patients were reported through the online surveillance system on the day of visiting hospital.

The percentage of delayed visiting to hospital differed significantly by years and epidemic and nonepidemic seasons and between children in and not in childcare center (all p values <0.05).

In addition, the reported numbers of both diseases fluctuated on weekdays but obviously decreased on weekends regardless of the epidemic or nonepidemic seasons.

Conclusions.

The reported cases of HFMD and epidemic parotitis had an obvious weekend effect, with an increasing tendency of cases delaying in hospital visiting over the recent years in Hanzhong, China.

Parents and caregivers rather than health systems should be primarily targeted for the prevention and control of infectious diseases and their local outbreaks such as community-based education on the second-dose vaccination of mumps and/or hand hygiene.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Wei, Jianjun& Zhu, Zhonghai& Qi, Qi& Zeng, Ling-Xia. 2020. Patient Delay in Hospital Visiting and the Weekend Effect of Surveillance Report on Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Epidemic Parotitis in Hanzhong City, China. Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology،Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1139170

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Wei, Jianjun…[et al.]. Patient Delay in Hospital Visiting and the Weekend Effect of Surveillance Report on Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Epidemic Parotitis in Hanzhong City, China. Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology No. 2020 (2020), pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1139170

American Medical Association (AMA)

Wei, Jianjun& Zhu, Zhonghai& Qi, Qi& Zeng, Ling-Xia. Patient Delay in Hospital Visiting and the Weekend Effect of Surveillance Report on Hand-Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Epidemic Parotitis in Hanzhong City, China. Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology. 2020. Vol. 2020, no. 2020, pp.1-11.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1139170

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1139170