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Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California

INTRODUCTION: As with many diseases, the epidemic of asthma among children over the past few decades has been shaped by a social and environmental context that is becoming progressively more evident. Commonly used methods for asthma surveillance, however, are based on national rather than local data...

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Autores principales: English, Paul B, Roberts, Eric M, Wong, Michelle, Wolff, Craig, Valdez, Samuel, Van den Eeden, Stephen K, Ray, G. Thomas
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16776893
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author English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Wong, Michelle
Wolff, Craig
Valdez, Samuel
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
author_facet English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Wong, Michelle
Wolff, Craig
Valdez, Samuel
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
author_sort English, Paul B
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: As with many diseases, the epidemic of asthma among children over the past few decades has been shaped by a social and environmental context that is becoming progressively more evident. Commonly used methods for asthma surveillance, however, are based on national rather than local data. The purpose of this study was to develop high-resolution asthma surveillance techniques responsive to the needs of health care professionals and local child health and social justice advocates. METHODS: We assembled a working data set of health care use records from 2001 from public and private sources covering 1.7 million person-months among children younger than 18 years in Alameda County, California. Health care use was categorized by type and analyzed by census tract demographic information. Images of the geographic distribution of health service events were created using density estimation mapping with overlapping 0.5-mile (805-m) radius spatial buffers, and statistical significance (two-tailed P < .05) was estimated using a Monte Carlo simulation algorithm. RESULTS: High-poverty communities had higher rates of emergency department visits due to asthma than low-poverty communities but had lower rates for indicators of quality primary asthma care. Geospatial analysis enabled visualization of this phenomenon; it further detected areas with elevated emergency department visit rates and potentially related environmental hazards in and around communities of concern. Areas of the county not previously considered to be deeply burdened by asthma were identified as having high emergency department visit rates. CONCLUSION: The assembly and high-resolution geospatial analysis of health care use data contributed to a more detailed depiction of pediatric asthma disparities than was previously available to community members, public health professionals, and clinicians. Information generated using these techniques facilitated discussion among stakeholders of the environmental and social contexts of asthma and health disparities in general. Proceedings of group evaluations suggested that the material aided in the translation of data describing spatial variations in health event risk to address specific community experiences and concerns.
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spelling pubmed-16378002006-12-06 Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California English, Paul B Roberts, Eric M Wong, Michelle Wolff, Craig Valdez, Samuel Van den Eeden, Stephen K Ray, G. Thomas Prev Chronic Dis Original Research INTRODUCTION: As with many diseases, the epidemic of asthma among children over the past few decades has been shaped by a social and environmental context that is becoming progressively more evident. Commonly used methods for asthma surveillance, however, are based on national rather than local data. The purpose of this study was to develop high-resolution asthma surveillance techniques responsive to the needs of health care professionals and local child health and social justice advocates. METHODS: We assembled a working data set of health care use records from 2001 from public and private sources covering 1.7 million person-months among children younger than 18 years in Alameda County, California. Health care use was categorized by type and analyzed by census tract demographic information. Images of the geographic distribution of health service events were created using density estimation mapping with overlapping 0.5-mile (805-m) radius spatial buffers, and statistical significance (two-tailed P < .05) was estimated using a Monte Carlo simulation algorithm. RESULTS: High-poverty communities had higher rates of emergency department visits due to asthma than low-poverty communities but had lower rates for indicators of quality primary asthma care. Geospatial analysis enabled visualization of this phenomenon; it further detected areas with elevated emergency department visit rates and potentially related environmental hazards in and around communities of concern. Areas of the county not previously considered to be deeply burdened by asthma were identified as having high emergency department visit rates. CONCLUSION: The assembly and high-resolution geospatial analysis of health care use data contributed to a more detailed depiction of pediatric asthma disparities than was previously available to community members, public health professionals, and clinicians. Information generated using these techniques facilitated discussion among stakeholders of the environmental and social contexts of asthma and health disparities in general. Proceedings of group evaluations suggested that the material aided in the translation of data describing spatial variations in health event risk to address specific community experiences and concerns. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2006-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC1637800/ /pubmed/16776893 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is a publication of the U.S. Government. This publication is in the public domain and is therefore without copyright. All text from this work may be reprinted freely. Use of these materials should be properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
English, Paul B
Roberts, Eric M
Wong, Michelle
Wolff, Craig
Valdez, Samuel
Van den Eeden, Stephen K
Ray, G. Thomas
Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title_full Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title_fullStr Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title_full_unstemmed Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title_short Progress in Pediatric Asthma Surveillance II: Geospatial Patterns of Asthma in Alameda County, California
title_sort progress in pediatric asthma surveillance ii: geospatial patterns of asthma in alameda county, california
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1637800/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16776893
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