Publication | Open Access
Ten-year performance of Influenzanet: ILI time series, risks, vaccine effects, and care-seeking behaviour
69
Citations
38
References
2015
Year
Computational EpidemiologySocial Determinants Of HealthVaccine HesitancyCovid-19Influenza VaccinesPreventive MedicineDigital HealthInfection ControlPublic HealthIli Time SeriesDisease SurveillanceTen-year PerformanceIli RiskEpidemiologyVaccinationVaccine EffectsEpidemic IntelligenceGlobal HealthInternational HealthVaccine EfficacyInfluenza VaccineMedicineInfectious Disease MonitoringIli DataSocial DistancingEgg-based Vaccine Production
Recent public health threats have propelled major innovations on infectious disease monitoring, culminating in the development of innovative syndromic surveillance methods. Influenzanet is an internet-based system that monitors influenza-like illness (ILI) in cohorts of self-reporting volunteers in European countries since 2003. We investigate and confirm coherence through the first ten years in comparison with ILI data from the European Influenza Surveillance Network and demonstrate country-specific behaviour of participants with ILI regarding medical care seeking. Using regression analysis, we determine that chronic diseases, being a child, living with children, being female, smoking and pets at home, are all independent predictors of ILI risk, whereas practicing sports and walking or bicycling for locomotion are associated with a small risk reduction. No effect for using public transportation or living alone was found. Furthermore, we determine the vaccine effectiveness for ILI for each season.
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