Author:
SMITH M. D.,STUART J.,ANDREWS N. J.,TELFER BRUNTON W. A.,CARTWRIGHT K. A. V.
Abstract
Variation in the incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease across
South and West England, in
1995, was measured through a survey of microbiology laboratories. A 100%
response rate was
achieved. The incidence by laboratory varied between 5·2 and 20·4
per 100000 catchment population (P<0·001). Adjusting
for pneumococcal
vaccine uptake rate in over 65 year olds,
hospital admission rates, blood culture system used and for the age and
sex structure of the
population, did not account for this variation. When blood culture sampling
rates were
included in a logistic regression model, the variation between
laboratories was much less and of
lower statistical significance (P=0·019).
Higher rates of blood culture sampling were associated
with a higher incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease. Consistently
high sampling should be
encouraged because a higher diagnostic rate should result in more selective
prescribing of
antibiotics, and secondly because improved ascertainment of severe pneumococcal
infections is
a prerequisite for the evaluation of new pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
48 articles.
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