Selected article for: "age group and symptom onset"

Author: Domínguez, Àngela; Soldevila, Núria; Torner, Núria; Martínez, Ana; Godoy, Pere; Rius, Cristina; Jané, Mireia
Title: Usefulness of Clinical Definitions of Influenza for Public Health Surveillance Purposes
  • Document date: 2020_1_14
  • ID: 0njm2cgh_34
    Snippet: A 2007-2008 United States study by Woolpert et al. [23] found that independent predictors of laboratory-confirmed influenza in the 6-49 years age group were cough and fever (aDOR 47.99; 95% CI 6.29-366.13 and 3.84; 95% CI 2.23-6.61, respectively), although acute symptom onset and, to a lesser extent, myalgia, were also predictors of laboratory-confirmed influenza. In our study, myalgia was a predictor in all age groups, but the sudden onset of sy.....
    Document: A 2007-2008 United States study by Woolpert et al. [23] found that independent predictors of laboratory-confirmed influenza in the 6-49 years age group were cough and fever (aDOR 47.99; 95% CI 6.29-366.13 and 3.84; 95% CI 2.23-6.61, respectively), although acute symptom onset and, to a lesser extent, myalgia, were also predictors of laboratory-confirmed influenza. In our study, myalgia was a predictor in all age groups, but the sudden onset of symptoms was a poor predictor in adults. Unlike our results, where headache had the third best performance (aDOR 1.94; 95% CI 1.78-2.12), other authors found headache had the best performance (DOR 21.2; 95% CI 5.2-86.4) [14] .

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