Author: Chu, Yanhui; Wu, Zhenyu; Ji, Jiayi; Sun, Jingyi; Sun, Xiaoyu; Qin, Guoyou; Qin, Jingning; Xiao, Zheng; Ren, Jian; Qin, Di; Zheng, Xueying; Wang, Xi-Ling
Title: Effects of school breaks on influenza-like illness incidence in a temperate Chinese region: an ecological study from 2008 to 2015 Document date: 2017_3_6
ID: r7a0orh7_11
Snippet: IRRs of younger schoolchildren aged 5-14 to adults was higher during winter school breaks than before breaks, while the opposite was true for the IRRs of older schoolchildren aged 15-24 to adults (table 1, figure 1C) . During summer breaks, schoolchildren-to-adults IRRs were significantly lower than those of 2-week before or after school breaks ( p<0.001). To be specific, IRRs of age 5-14 to age above 60 had declined by 13.3% (95% CI 3.59%, 22.1%.....
Document: IRRs of younger schoolchildren aged 5-14 to adults was higher during winter school breaks than before breaks, while the opposite was true for the IRRs of older schoolchildren aged 15-24 to adults (table 1, figure 1C) . During summer breaks, schoolchildren-to-adults IRRs were significantly lower than those of 2-week before or after school breaks ( p<0.001). To be specific, IRRs of age 5-14 to age above 60 had declined by 13.3% (95% CI 3.59%, 22.1%). The above conclusion was robust when we considered a 4-week window before and after winter/ summer break (see online supplementary table S3).
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