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1.
Environ Health ; 21(1): 122, 2022 12 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36464683

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Air quality is a major public health threat linked to poor birth outcomes, respiratory and cardiovascular disease, and premature mortality. Deprived groups and children are disproportionately affected. Bradford will implement a Clean Air Zone (CAZ) as part of the Bradford Clean Air Plan (B-CAP) in 2022 to reduce pollution, providing a natural experiment. The aim of the current study is to evaluate the impact of the B-CAP on health outcomes and air quality, inequalities and explore value for money. An embedded process and implementation evaluation will also explore barriers and facilitators to implementation, impact on attitudes and behaviours, and any adverse consequences. METHODS: The study is split into 4 work packages (WP). WP1A: 20 interviews with decision makers, 20 interviews with key stakeholders; 10 public focus groups and documentary analysis of key reports will assess implementation barriers, acceptability and adverse or unanticipated consequences at 1 year post-implementation (defined as point at which charging CAZ goes 'live'). WP1B: A population survey (n = 2000) will assess travel behaviour and attitudes at baseline and change at 1 year post-implementation). WP2: Routine air quality measurements will be supplemented with data from mobile pollution sensors in 12 schools collected by N = 240 pupil citizen scientists (4 within, 4 bordering and 4 distal to CAZ boundary). Pupils will carry sensors over four monitoring periods over a 12 month period (two pre, and two post-implementation). We will explore whether reductions in pollution vary by CAZ proximity. WP3A: We will conduct a quasi-experimental interrupted time series analysis using a longitudinal routine health dataset of > 530,000 Bradford residents comparing trends (3 years prior vs 3 years post) in respiratory health (assessed via emergency/GP attendances. WP3B: We will use the richly-characterised Born in Bradford cohort (13,500 children) to explore health inequalities in respiratory health using detailed socio-economic data. WP4: will entail a multi-sectoral health economic evaluation to determine value for money of the B-CAP. DISCUSSION: This will be first comprehensive quasi-experimental evaluation of a city-wide policy intervention to improve air quality. The findings will be of value for other areas implementing this type of approach. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN67530835 https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN67530835.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution , Conservation of Natural Resources , Public Health , Child , Humans , Air Pollution/analysis , Air Pollution/prevention & control , United Kingdom , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/methods , Interviews as Topic , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods
3.
Buenos Aires; s.n; 2022. 13 p.
Non-conventional in Spanish | InstitutionalDB, BINACIS, UNISALUD | ID: biblio-1398401

ABSTRACT

El presente documento presenta el informe realizado luego del tránsito por la sede de rotación externa de elección libre de la residente de 3er año Lic. Antonella Yanina Coullery. La rotación se llevó a cabo durante el período comprendido entre el 2 de Mayo al 30 de Junio del 2022 en los Centros Municipales de Salud Comunitaria (CMSc) dependientes de la Subdirección General de Prevención y Promoción de la Salud, en la ciudad de Madrid, España. A continuación, se presenta la sede de rotación electiva, se expone la fundamentación sobre la elección de la misma, se explicitan objetivos del proceso de rotación, actividades realizadas, aprendizajes logrados, obstáculos hallados y aportes realizados a la institución. Para finalizar, se elabora una evaluación y delinean conclusiones, y se adjunta la evaluación de la institución. (AU)


Subject(s)
Public Health/instrumentation , Community Health Services/methods , Internship and Residency , Internship, Nonmedical , Spain , Health Education , Health Promotion
4.
Braz. J. Pharm. Sci. (Online) ; 58: e19702, 2022. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1394037

ABSTRACT

Abstract Substance use disorder is one of the major social and public health problems in the world. The present study analyzed the pharmacoepidemiological profile of patients treated at the Psychosocial Treatment Center for Alcohol and Substance Use Disorders (CAPS-AD) for treatment of alcohol use disorders (AUD), cocaine use disorders (CUD) and concomitant alcohol and cocaine use disorders (A-CUD) in the city of Betim-MG. The study used quantitative and descriptive data and was based on the evaluation of medical records of patients attended from January to December 2016. After analyzing 295 medical records, the majority of study participants were male (83.7 %) with an average age of 46.26 for AUD, 28.88 for CUD and 34.29 for A-CUD. The most prescribed drugs for AUD were diazepam (54.1 %), thiamine (37 %), complex B vitamins (29.5 %), and disulfiram (2.7 %); for CUD, diazepam (26.9 %) and haloperidol (23.1 %). It should be noticed that although contraindicated by the guidelines, chlorpromazine (42.3 %, 25.3 %, 20.3 %) was prescribed for CUD, AUD, and A-CUD respectively. Knowing the pharmacoepidemiological profile of CAPS-AD patients is extremely important for making decisions regarding which medicines to make available to the population.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Substance-Related Disorders/drug therapy , Alcohol-Related Disorders/drug therapy , Cocaine-Related Disorders/drug therapy , Drug Therapy/instrumentation , Patients/classification , Chlorpromazine/adverse effects , Public Health/instrumentation , Diazepam/adverse effects , Disulfiram/adverse effects , Disulfiram/agonists
5.
Elife ; 102021 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34652271

ABSTRACT

Simulating nationwide realistic individual movements with a detailed geographical structure can help optimise public health policies. However, existing tools have limited resolution or can only account for a limited number of agents. We introduce Epidemap, a new framework that can capture the daily movement of more than 60 million people in a country at a building-level resolution in a realistic and computationally efficient way. By applying it to the case of an infectious disease spreading in France, we uncover hitherto neglected effects, such as the emergence of two distinct peaks in the daily number of cases or the importance of local density in the timing of arrival of the epidemic. Finally, we show that the importance of super-spreading events strongly varies over time.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Epidemics/statistics & numerical data , Geography/methods , Public Health/methods , France/epidemiology , Humans , Public Health/instrumentation , Spatial Analysis
6.
J Community Health Nurs ; 38(3): 173-178, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34148434

ABSTRACT

This article describes a nurse-run clinic for low-income individuals or individuals experiencing homelessness. We conducted a quality improvement project using data from 111 individuals over 194 visits. Thirty-seven percent of patients had difficulty managing their health and 22% reported being in an active health crisis. The visits resulted in patients leaving with their visit goal being met (86%), and 96% of nonemergent cases being diverted from the emergency room. The nurse-run clinic provided access to care and served as a safety net for a vulnerable population, providing support for this clinic model with this population.


Subject(s)
Community-Institutional Relations/trends , Practice Patterns, Nurses'/trends , Public Health/methods , Humans , Practice Patterns, Nurses'/organization & administration , Public Health/instrumentation , Quality Improvement
7.
Value Health ; 24(5): 607-614, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33933228

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: While highly effective in preventing SARS-CoV-2 spread, national lockdowns come with an enormous economic price. Few countries have adopted an alternative "testing, tracing, and isolation" approach to selectively isolate people at high exposure risk, thereby minimizing the economic impact. To assist policy makers, we performed a cost-effectiveness analysis of these 2 strategies. METHODS: A modified Susceptible, Exposed, Infectious, Recovered, and Deceased (SEIRD) model was employed to assess the situation in Israel, a small country with ∼9 million people. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of these strategies as well as the expected number of infected individuals and deaths were calculated. RESULTS: A nationwide lockdown is expected to save, on average, 274 (median 124, interquartile range: 71-221) lives compared to the "testing, tracing, and isolation" approach. However, the ICER will be, on average, $45 104 156 (median $49.6 million, interquartile range: 22.7-220.1) to prevent 1 case of death. CONCLUSION: A national lockdown has a moderate advantage in saving lives with tremendous costs and possible overwhelming economic effects. These findings should assist decision makers dealing with additional waves of this pandemic.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/prevention & control , Pandemics/economics , Pandemics/prevention & control , Physical Distancing , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/psychology , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Humans , Israel/epidemiology , Pandemics/statistics & numerical data , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/methods , Public Health/standards
8.
Value Health ; 24(5): 658-667, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33933234

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Our study investigates the extent to which uptake of a COVID-19 digital contact-tracing (DCT) app among the Dutch population is affected by its configurations, its societal effects, and government policies toward such an app. METHODS: We performed a discrete choice experiment among Dutch adults including 7 attributes, that is, who gets a notification, waiting time for testing, possibility for shops to refuse customers who have not installed the app, stopping condition for contact tracing, number of people unjustifiably quarantined, number of deaths prevented, and number of households with financial problems prevented. The data were analyzed by means of panel mixed logit models. RESULTS: The prevention of deaths and financial problems of households had a very strong influence on the uptake of the app. Predicted app uptake rates ranged from 24% to 78% for the worst and best possible app for these societal effects. We found a strong positive relationship between people's trust in government and people's propensity to install the DCT app. CONCLUSIONS: The uptake levels we find are much more volatile than the uptake levels predicted in comparable studies that did not include societal effects in their discrete choice experiments. Our finding that the societal effects are a major factor in the uptake of the DCT app results in a chicken-or-the-egg causality dilemma. That is, the societal effects of the app are severely influenced by the uptake of the app, but the uptake of the app is severely influenced by its societal effects.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/diagnosis , Contact Tracing/instrumentation , Mobile Applications/standards , Social Change , COVID-19/epidemiology , Contact Tracing/statistics & numerical data , Health Policy , Humans , Netherlands , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/methods , Surveys and Questionnaires
9.
Fam Syst Health ; 39(1): 112-120, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34014734

ABSTRACT

Population health expands the focus of health care from individual, in-person care to the proactive management of cohorts that can occur asynchronously from a clinical encounter. In its most successful form, the approach segments populations by defined characteristics and promotes outreach and engagement to deliver targeted interventions, even among those who have missed recent or routine care. The triple aim, supported by the Institutes for Health Care Improvement, emphasizes improving the health of populations, cost of care, and patient and care team experience and has influenced new approaches in primary care. In primary care settings such as community health centers, the goal of improving outcomes leverages technology to expand focus from point-of-care interventions to population-level approaches to deliver high-quality preventive services and chronic disease management that benefit entire families and communities. Developments in informatics have introduced technology tools for population management and underscored the need to align technology with effective processes and stakeholder engagement for success. Informed by a review of the literature and observations across multiple implementations of population health strategies in community health, in this conceptual paper, we describe the steps (process), domains of team expertise (people), and health information technology components (technology) that contribute to the success of a population health strategy. We also explore future opportunities to expand the reach and impact of population health through patient engagement, analytics, interventions to address social determinants of health, responses to emerging public health priorities, and prioritization-of-use cases by assessing community-specific needs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Public Health Administration/instrumentation , Public Health Administration/methods , Public Health/methods , Humans , Primary Health Care/methods , Primary Health Care/trends , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/trends , Public Health Administration/trends
10.
Nurs Inq ; 28(1): e12380, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32955787

ABSTRACT

As a result of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, health professionals are faced with situations they have not previously encountered and are being forced to make difficult ethical decisions. As the first group to experience challenges of caring for patients with coronavirus, Chinese nurses endure heartbreak and face stressful moral dilemmas. In this opinion piece, we examine three related critical questions: Whether society has the right to require health professionals to risk their lives caring for patients; whether health professionals have the right to refuse to care for patients during the coronavirus pandemic; and what obligations there are to protect health professionals? Value of care, community expectations, legal obligations, professional and codes of practice may compel health professionals to put themselves at risks in emergency situations. The bioethical principles of autonomy, justice, beneficence and non-maleficence, as well as public health ethics, guide nurses to justify their decisions as to whether they are entitled to refuse to treat COVID-19 patients during the pandemic. We hope that the open discussion would support the international society in addressing similar ethical challenges in their respective situations during this public health crisis.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/prevention & control , Treatment Refusal/ethics , COVID-19/transmission , China , Humans , Pandemics/prevention & control , Pandemics/statistics & numerical data , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/methods , Treatment Refusal/trends
11.
JMIR Public Health Surveill ; 6(4): e15524, 2020 12 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33346734

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Traditional research approaches, especially questionnaires and paper-based assessments, limit in-depth understanding of the fluid dynamic processes associated with child well-being and development. This includes bedtime routine activities such as toothbrushing and reading a book before bed. The increase in innovative digital technologies alongside greater use and familiarity among the public creates unique opportunities to use these technical developments in research. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to (1) examine the best way of assessing bedtime routines in families and develop an automated, interactive, text message survey assessment delivered directly to participants' mobile phones and (2) test the assessment within a predominately deprived sociodemographic sample to explore retention, uptake, feedback, and effectiveness. METHODS: A public and patient involvement project showed clear preference for interactive text surveys regarding bedtime routines. The developed interactive text survey included questions on bedtime routine activities and was delivered for seven consecutive nights to participating parents' mobile phones. A total of 200 parents participated. Apart from the completion of the text survey, feedback was provided by participants, and data on response, completion, and retention rates were captured. RESULTS: There was a high retention rate (185/200, 92.5%), and the response rate was high (160/185, 86.5%). In total, 114 participants provided anonymized feedback. Only a small percentage (5/114, 4.4%) of participants reported problems associated with completing the assessment. The majority (99/114, 86.8%) of participants enjoyed their participation in the study, with an average satisfaction score of 4.6 out of 5. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated the potential of deploying SMS text message-based surveys to capture and quantify real-time information on recurrent dynamic processes in public health research. Changes and adaptations based on recommendations are crucial next steps in further exploring the diagnostic and potential intervention properties of text survey and text messaging approaches.


Subject(s)
Public Health/methods , Sleep , Text Messaging/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires
12.
J Prev Med Public Health ; 53(6): 455-464, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33296586

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The distribution of hospitals in Korea is unbalanced in terms of accessibility. Many local public health centers (PHCs) exempt out-of-pocket payments (OOPs) based on local government laws to increase coverage. However, this varies across administrative regions, as many make this exemption for the elderly, while others do not. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of the OOP exemption at local PHCs among elderly individuals. METHODS: This study used online data on Korean national law to gather information on individual local governments' regulations regarding OOP exemptions. Individual-level data were gathered from the 2018 Community Health Survey and regional-level data from public online sources. RESULTS: The study analyzed 132 regions and 44 918 elderly people. A statistical analysis of rate differences and 2-level multiple logistic regression were carried out. The rate difference according to whether elderly individuals resided in areas with the OOP exemption was 1.97%p (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.07 to 2.88) for PHC utilization, 1.37%p (95% CI, 0.67 to 2.08) for hypertension treatment, and 2.19%p (95% CI, 0.63 to 3.74) for diabetes treatment. The regression analysis showed that OOP exemption had an effect on hypertension treatment, with a fixed-effect odds ratio of 1.25 (95% CI, 1.05 to 1.48). CONCLUSIONS: The OOP exemption at PHCs can affect medical utilization in Korea, especially for hypertension treatment. The OOP exemption should be expanded to improve healthcare utilization in Korea.


Subject(s)
Health Expenditures/statistics & numerical data , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Tax Exemption/standards , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Middle Aged , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/methods , Republic of Korea
13.
JMIR Public Health Surveill ; 6(4): e20588, 2020 11 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33151162

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) pose a significant public health challenge in the United States. Traditional surveillance systems are adversely affected by data quality issues, underreporting of cases, and reporting delays, resulting in missed prevention opportunities to respond to trends in disease prevalence. Search engine data can potentially facilitate an efficient and economical enhancement to surveillance reporting systems established for STIs. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to develop and train a predictive model using reported STI case data from Chicago, Illinois, and to investigate the model's predictive capacity, timeliness, and ability to target interventions to subpopulations using Google Trends data. METHODS: Deidentified STI case data for chlamydia, gonorrhea, and primary and secondary syphilis from 2011-2017 were obtained from the Chicago Department of Public Health. The data set included race/ethnicity, age, and birth sex. Google Correlate was used to identify the top 100 correlated search terms with "STD symptoms," and an autocrawler was established using Google Health Application Programming Interface to collect the search volume for each term. Elastic net regression was used to evaluate prediction accuracy, and cross-correlation analysis was used to identify timeliness of prediction. Subgroup elastic net regression analysis was performed for race, sex, and age. RESULTS: For gonorrhea and chlamydia, actual and predicted STI values correlated moderately in 2011 (chlamydia: r=0.65; gonorrhea: r=0.72) but correlated highly (chlamydia: r=0.90; gonorrhea: r=0.94) from 2012 to 2017. However, for primary and secondary syphilis, the high correlation was observed only for 2012 (r=0.79), 2013 (r=0.77), 2016 (0.80), and 2017 (r=0.84), with 2011, 2014, and 2015 showing moderate correlations (r=0.55-0.70). Model performance was the most accurate (highest correlation and lowest mean absolute error) for gonorrhea. Subgroup analyses improved model fit across disease and year. Regression models using search terms selected from the cross-correlation analysis improved the prediction accuracy and timeliness across diseases and years. CONCLUSIONS: Integrating nowcasting with Google Trends in surveillance activities can potentially enhance the prediction and timeliness of outbreak detection and response as well as target interventions to subpopulations. Future studies should prospectively examine the utility of Google Trends applied to STI surveillance and response.


Subject(s)
Forecasting/methods , Public Health/instrumentation , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/diagnosis , Social Media/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Chicago/epidemiology , Chlamydia Infections/epidemiology , Female , Gonorrhea/epidemiology , Humans , Male , Prevalence , Public Health/methods , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/epidemiology , Social Media/instrumentation , Syphilis/epidemiology
14.
J Agromedicine ; 25(4): 423-426, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32894688

ABSTRACT

Social media use in public health and other health related research applications has seen a rapid increase in recent years. However, there has been very limited utilization of this growing digital sector in agricultural injury research. Social media offers immense potential in gathering informal data, both text and images, converting them into knowledge, which can open up avenues for research, policy, and practice. There are a number of ways social media data can be utilized in agricultural injury research. This paper touches on the adoption of these data sources in health research and discusses the use of social media as an exploratory research tool that can peer into and identify the edges of potential health and safety problems.


Subject(s)
Public Health/instrumentation , Research/instrumentation , Social Media/statistics & numerical data , Agriculture/statistics & numerical data , COVID-19/epidemiology , Farmers/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Occupational Health , Occupational Injuries/epidemiology
15.
Prev Chronic Dis ; 17: E76, 2020 08 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32762809

ABSTRACT

Social media platforms are low-cost tools that can be used to address issues in public health nutrition, especially in countries where health-related institutions experience economic limitations. We aimed to emphasize the benefits of using social media to promote health that have been documented to date. To show social media's positive impact on population health literacy, we briefly describe an inexpensive systematic communication strategy implemented in our research center through 2 social media platforms, the lessons learned, and the strategy's short-term results. Because social media use in public health is a new field of study, this perspective also focuses on the current limitations and gaps in evidence that need to be addressed to translate the best practices into policy recommendations. In conclusion, the perspective highlights the role that health actors and governments should take to maximize the benefits of social media use.


Subject(s)
Health Promotion/methods , Public Health/instrumentation , Social Media , Health Literacy , Humans , Information Dissemination/methods , Latin America
16.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep ; 14(4): 494-503, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32660664

ABSTRACT

The co-occurrence of the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season and the ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic creates complex dilemmas for protecting populations from these intersecting threats. Climate change is likely contributing to stronger, wetter, slower-moving, and more dangerous hurricanes. Climate-driven hazards underscore the imperative for timely warning, evacuation, and sheltering of storm-threatened populations - proven life-saving protective measures that gather evacuees together inside durable, enclosed spaces when a hurricane approaches. Meanwhile, the rapid acquisition of scientific knowledge regarding how COVID-19 spreads has guided mass anti-contagion strategies, including lockdowns, sheltering at home, physical distancing, donning personal protective equipment, conscientious handwashing, and hygiene practices. These life-saving strategies, credited with preventing millions of COVID-19 cases, separate and move people apart. Enforcement coupled with fear of contracting COVID-19 have motivated high levels of adherence to these stringent regulations. How will populations react when warned to shelter from an oncoming Atlantic hurricane while COVID-19 is actively circulating in the community? Emergency managers, health care providers, and public health preparedness professionals must create viable solutions to confront these potential scenarios: elevated rates of hurricane-related injury and mortality among persons who refuse to evacuate due to fear of COVID-19, and the resurgence of COVID-19 cases among hurricane evacuees who shelter together.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/prevention & control , Cyclonic Storms/prevention & control , Pandemics/prevention & control , Risk Management/methods , Atlantic Ocean/epidemiology , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/mortality , Climate Change , Cyclonic Storms/mortality , Cyclonic Storms/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Shelter/methods , Emergency Shelter/trends , Humans , Pandemics/statistics & numerical data , Public Health/instrumentation , Public Health/methods , Public Health/trends , Risk Management/standards , Risk Management/trends
17.
Article in Spanish | InstitutionalDB, BINACIS, UNISALUD | ID: biblio-1342842

ABSTRACT

Para evitar el abordaje de la pandemia de Covid-19 y el aislamiento social que se relacione con el desamparo, el trauma, o una catástrofe, el autor propone distintas intervenciones en la atención psicológica, que permitan construir una distinción entre una situación difícil pero abordable y una experiencia traumática.


Subject(s)
Psychoanalysis/trends , Social Isolation/psychology , Public Health/instrumentation , Pandemics , Psychosocial Intervention/instrumentation , Psychosocial Intervention/methods , COVID-19
18.
JMIR Public Health Surveill ; 6(2): e15917, 2020 04 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32352389

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many public health departments use record linkage between surveillance data and external data sources to inform public health interventions. However, little guidance is available to inform these activities, and many health departments rely on deterministic algorithms that may miss many true matches. In the context of public health action, these missed matches lead to missed opportunities to deliver interventions and may exacerbate existing health inequities. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to compare the performance of record linkage algorithms commonly used in public health practice. METHODS: We compared five deterministic (exact, Stenger, Ocampo 1, Ocampo 2, and Bosh) and two probabilistic record linkage algorithms (fastLink and beta record linkage [BRL]) using simulations and a real-world scenario. We simulated pairs of datasets with varying numbers of errors per record and the number of matching records between the two datasets (ie, overlap). We matched the datasets using each algorithm and calculated their recall (ie, sensitivity, the proportion of true matches identified by the algorithm) and precision (ie, positive predictive value, the proportion of matches identified by the algorithm that were true matches). We estimated the average computation time by performing a match with each algorithm 20 times while varying the size of the datasets being matched. In a real-world scenario, HIV and sexually transmitted disease surveillance data from King County, Washington, were matched to identify people living with HIV who had a syphilis diagnosis in 2017. We calculated the recall and precision of each algorithm compared with a composite standard based on the agreement in matching decisions across all the algorithms and manual review. RESULTS: In simulations, BRL and fastLink maintained a high recall at nearly all data quality levels, while being comparable with deterministic algorithms in terms of precision. Deterministic algorithms typically failed to identify matches in scenarios with low data quality. All the deterministic algorithms had a shorter average computation time than the probabilistic algorithms. BRL had the slowest overall computation time (14 min when both datasets contained 2000 records). In the real-world scenario, BRL had the lowest trade-off between recall (309/309, 100.0%) and precision (309/312, 99.0%). CONCLUSIONS: Probabilistic record linkage algorithms maximize the number of true matches identified, reducing gaps in the coverage of interventions and maximizing the reach of public health action.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , COVID-19/diagnosis , Chromosome Mapping/standards , Electronic Health Records/instrumentation , Public Health/instrumentation , COVID-19/physiopathology , Chromosome Mapping/methods , Chromosome Mapping/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records/standards , Electronic Health Records/trends , Humans , Pandemics/prevention & control , Public Health/methods , Public Health/trends , Reproducibility of Results , Validation Studies as Topic
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