Heat illness presentations to emergency departments in Western Sydney: surveillance for environmental, personal and behavioural risk factors.

IF 2.5 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Stephen J Conaty, Sayontonee Ghosh, Khizar Ashraf, Karin H Taylor, George Truman, Helen Noonan, Mithilesh Dronavalli, Bin Jalaludin
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE To pilot surveillance to describe environmental, personal and behavioural risk factors for people presenting to hospital emergency departments (EDs) with heat illness. METHODS We conducted a retrospective case series and telephone interview study of people presenting to EDs across South Western Sydney, Western Sydney and Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health Districts with heat illness over the 2017/18 and 2018/19 summer periods (1 December to 28 February). We used the Public Health Rapid Emergency Disease Syndromic Surveillance (PHREDSS) 'heat problems' syndrome to identify people with heat illness and medical records to find contact details. We developed a detailed questionnaire instrument to guide the telephone interview. RESULTS A total of 129 individuals presented with 'heat problems' (57 in 2017/18 and 72 in 2018/19). The median age was 44 years (range 1-89 years). Most attended hospitals via the NSW Ambulance Service (58%) or private car (40%). Of the total, 53% were classified as triage category 3 (potentially life-threatening), 27% as category 4 (potentially serious) and 16% as category 2 (imminently life-threatening). The main supplementary codes were heat exhaustion (35%), heat syncope (39%), and heat stroke (30%). The majority were discharged from the emergency department after completing treatment (73%), with 21% requiring admission. A total of 38 follow-up interviews were completed (29% response rate). Almost all individuals were exposed to heat outside their home environment: 11 (29%) were engaged in paid work, 5 (13%) in outdoor housework, and 10 (26%) in outdoor recreational activities. CONCLUSION Our pilot surveillance study successfully collected home, local environment and behavioural risk factors on a small cohort presenting with 'heat problems' to EDs in Western Sydney during the summer months. Most were exposed to heat outdoors while engaged in work or recreation outside the home, and were preventable.
西悉尼急诊科热病就诊情况:环境、个人和行为风险因素监测。
目的通过试点监测,描述医院急诊科(ed)中暑患者的环境、个人和行为风险因素。方法:我们对2017/18和2018/19夏季(12月1日至2月28日)在悉尼西南部、西悉尼和尼皮安蓝山地方卫生区就诊的中暑患者进行了回顾性病例系列和电话访谈研究。我们使用了公共卫生快速突发疾病综合征监测(PHREDSS)“热问题”综合症,以确定谁有热疾病和医疗记录,以找到联系方式。我们开发了一个详细的问卷调查工具来指导电话访谈。结果共有129人出现“发热问题”(2017/18年度57人,2018/19年度72人)。中位年龄为44岁(范围1-89岁)。大多数人通过新南威尔士州救护车服务中心(58%)或私家车(40%)前往医院。其中,53%被分类为第3类(可能危及生命),27%被分类为第4类(可能严重),16%被分类为第2类(迫在眉睫的危及生命)。主要补充症状为热衰竭(35%)、热晕厥(39%)和中暑(30%)。大多数患者在完成治疗后出院(73%),其中21%需要入院。共完成38次随访访谈(回复率29%)。几乎所有人都暴露在家庭环境之外的高温环境中:11人(29%)从事有偿工作,5人(13%)从事户外家务,10人(26%)从事户外娱乐活动。结论:我们的试点监测研究成功地收集了悉尼西部夏季出现“热问题”的一小群急诊患者的家庭、当地环境和行为风险因素。大多数是在户外工作或娱乐时暴露在户外的高温下,并且是可以预防的。
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来源期刊
Public Health Research & Practice
Public Health Research & Practice PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: Public Health Research & Practice is an open-access, quarterly, online journal with a strong focus on the connection between research, policy and practice. It publishes innovative, high-quality papers that inform public health policy and practice, paying particular attention to innovations, data and perspectives from policy and practice. The journal is published by the Sax Institute, a national leader in promoting the use of research evidence in health policy. Formerly known as The NSW Public Health Bulletin, the journal has a long history. It was published by the NSW Ministry of Health for nearly a quarter of a century. Responsibility for its publication transferred to the Sax Institute in 2014, and the journal receives guidance from an expert editorial board.
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