Identification of methodological issues regarding direct impact indicators of COVID-19: a rapid scoping review on morbidity, severity and mortality

Author:

Garriga Cesar1ORCID,Valero-Gaspar Teresa1ORCID,Rodriguez-Blazquez Carmen12ORCID,Diaz Asuncion13ORCID,Bezzegh Péter4ORCID,Daňková Šárka5ORCID,Unim Brigid6ORCID,Palmieri Luigi6ORCID,Thiβen Martin7ORCID,Pentz Richard8ORCID,Cilović-Lagarija Šeila9ORCID,Jogunčić Anes9ORCID,Feteira-Santos Rodrigo1011ORCID,Vuković Jakov12ORCID,Idavain Jane13ORCID,Curta Anda14,Sandu Petru14ORCID,Vinko Matej15ORCID,Forjaz Maria João116ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Epidemiology, Carlos III Health Institute , Madrid, Spain

2. Neurodegenerative Diseases of the Centre for Biomedical Network Research (CIBERNED) , Madrid, Spain

3. CIBER Thematic Area of Infectious Diseases (CIBERINFEC) , Madrid, Spain

4. National Institute for Health Services (OKFO) , Budapest, Hungary

5. Institute of Health Information and Statistics of the Czech Republic (“IHIS CR”) , Praha, Czech Republic

6. Italian National Institute of Health (ISS) , Rome, Italy

7. Robert Koch Institute (RKI) , Berlin, Germany

8. Austrian National Public Health Institute (GÖG) , Vienna, Austria

9. Institute of Public Health of the Federation of BiH (ZZJZ FBiH) , Mostaru, Bosnia and Herzegovina

10. Área Disciplinar Autónoma de Bioestatística, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa , Lisbon, Portugal

11. Instituto de Saúde Ambiental, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa , Lisbon, Portugal

12. Croatian Institute of Public Health (HZJZ) , Zagreb, Croatia

13. National Institute for Health Development (TAI) , Tallinn, Estonia

14. National Institute of Public Health (INSP) , Bucuresti, Romania

15. National Institute of Public Health (NIJZ) , Ljubljana, Slovenia

16. Research Network on Chronicity, Primary Care and Health Promotion (RICAPPS) , Madrid, Spain

Abstract

Abstract Background During the first epidemic wave, COVID-19 surveillance focused on quantifying the magnitude and the escalation of a growing global health crisis. The scientific community first assessed risk through basic indicators, such as the number of cases or rates of new cases and deaths, and later began using other direct impact indicators to conduct more detailed analyses. We aimed at synthesizing the scientific community’s contribution to assessing the direct impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on population health through indicators reported in research papers. Methods We conducted a rapid scoping review to identify and describe health indicators included in articles published between January 2020 and June 2021, using one strategy to search PubMed, EMBASE and WHO COVID-19 databases. Sixteen experts from European public health institutions screened papers and retrieved indicator characteristics. We also asked in an online survey how the health indicators were added to and used in policy documents in Europe. Results After reviewing 3891 records, we selected a final sample of 67 articles and 233 indicators. We identified 52 (22.3%) morbidity indicators from 33 articles, 105 severity indicators (45.1%, 27 articles) and 68 mortality indicators (29.2%, 51). Respondents from 22 countries completed 31 questionnaires, and the majority reported morbidity indicators (29, 93.5%), followed by mortality indicators (26, 83.9%). Conclusions The indicators collated here might be useful to assess the impact of future pandemics. Therefore, their measurement should be standardized to allow for comparisons between settings, countries and different populations.

Funder

Population Health Information Research Infrastructure

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference34 articles.

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