Under-reporting of infectious gastrointestinal illness in British Columbia, Canada: who is counted in provincial communicable disease statistics?

2008 
Under-reporting of infectious gastrointestinal illness (IGI) in British Columbia, Canada was calculated using simulation modelling, accounting for the uncertainty and variability of input parameters. Factors affecting under-reporting were assessed during a cross-sectional randomized telephone survey. For every case of IGI reported to the province, a mean of 347 community cases occurred (5th and 95th percentile estimates ranged from 181 to 611 community cases, respectively). Vomiting [odds ratio (OR) 2·15, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 1·03-4·49] and antibiotic use in the previous 28 days (OR 3·59, 95% CI 1·17-10·97) significantly predicted health-care visits in a logistic regression model. In bivariate analyses, physicians were significantly less likely to request stool samples from patients with vomiting (RR 0·09, 95% CI 0·01-0·65) and patients of North American as opposed to non-North American cultural groups (RR 0·38, 95 % CI 0·15-0·96). Physicians were more likely to request stool samples from older patients (P = 0·003), patients with fewer household members (P = 0·002) and those who reported anti-diarrhoeal use following illness (RR 3·33, 95% CI 1·32-8·45). People with symptoms of vomiting were under-represented in provincial communicable disease statistics. Differential degrees of under-reporting must be understood before biased surveillance data can be adjusted.
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