• Health security · Sep 2018

    Estimating Weekly Call Volume to a National Nurse Telephone Triage Line in an Influenza Pandemic.

    • Bishwa B Adhikari, Lisa M Koonin, Melissa L Mugambi, Kellye D Sliger, Michael L Washington, Emily B Kahn, and Martin I Meltzer.
    • Bishwa B. Adhikari, PhD, is a Senior Economist; Michael L. Washington, PhD, is a Health Scientist; Emily B. Kahn, PhD, is a Senior Epidemiologist; and Martin I. Meltzer, PhD, is Senior Health Economist/Distinguished Consultant; all at the National Center for Emerging & Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, GA. Lisa M. Koonin, DrPH, MN, MPH, is Deputy Director, Influenza Coordination Unit, National Center for Immunization & Respiratory Diseases, CDC, Atlanta. Melissa L. Mugambi, PhD, is Assistant Professor, Department of Global Health, University of Washington , Seattle, WA. Kellye D. Sliger, MPH, is an Epidemiologist, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge, TN. The authors are solely responsible for the content of this article; the views presented do not necessarily represent the official views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The authors have no conflicts of interest.
    • Health Secur. 2018 Sep 1; 16 (5): 334-340.

    AbstractTelephone nurse triage lines, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Flu on Call®, a national nurse triage line, may help reduce the surge in demand for health care during an influenza pandemic by triaging callers, providing advice about clinical care and information about the pandemic, and providing access to prescription antiviral medication. We developed a Call Volume Projection Tool to estimate national call volume to Flu on Call® during an influenza pandemic. The tool incorporates 2 influenza clinical attack rates (20% and 30%), 4 different levels of pandemic severity, and different initial "seed numbers" of cases (10 or 100), and it allows variation in which week the nurse triage line opens. The tool calculates call volume by using call-to-hospitalization ratios based on pandemic severity. We derived data on nurse triage line calls and call-to-hospitalization ratios from experience with the 2009 Minnesota FluLine nurse triage line. Assuming a 20% clinical attack rate and a case hospitalization rate of 0.8% to 1.5% (1968-like pandemic severity), we estimated the nationwide number of calls during the peak week of the pandemic to range from 1,551,882 to 3,523,902. Assuming a more severe 1957-like pandemic (case hospitalization rate = 1.5% to 3.0%), the national number of calls during the peak week of the pandemic ranged from 2,909,778 to 7,047,804. These results will aid in planning and developing nurse triage lines at both the national and state levels for use during a future influenza pandemic.

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