The impact of influenza epidemics on mortality: introducing a severity index.

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of recent influenza epidemics on mortality in the United States and to develop an index for comparing the severity of individual epidemics. METHODS A cyclical regression model was applied to weekly national vital statistics from 1972 through 1992 to estimate excesses in pneumonia and influenza mortality and all-cause mortality for each influenza season. Each season was categorized on the basis of increments of 2000 pneumonia and influenza excess deaths, and each of these severity categories was correlated with a range of all-cause excess mortality. RESULTS Each of the 20 influenza seasons studied was associated with an average of 5600 pneumonia and influenza excess deaths (range, 0-11,800) and 21,300 all-cause excess deaths (range, 0-47,200). Most influenza A(H3N2) seasons fell into severity categories 4 to 6 (23,000-45,000 all-cause excess deaths), whereas most A(H1N1) and B seasons were ranked in categories 1 to 3 (0-23,000 such deaths). CONCLUSIONS From 1972 through 1992, influenza epidemics accounted for a total of 426,000 deaths in the United States, many times more than those associated with recent pandemics. The influenza epidemic severity index was useful for categorizing severity and provided improved seasonal estimates of the total number of influenza-related deaths.

[1]  S. D. Collins Excess Mortality from Causes other than Influenza and Pneumonia during Influenza Epidemics. , 1932 .

[2]  S. D. Collins,et al.  Trends and epidemics of influenza and pneumonia: 1918-1951. , 1951, Public health reports.

[3]  R. Serfling,et al.  Observations on excess mortality associated with epidemic influenza. , 1961, Maryland state medical journal.

[4]  R. Serfling Methods for current statistical analysis of excess pneumonia-influenza deaths. , 1963, Public health reports.

[5]  A. Langmuir,et al.  Excess mortality from epidemic influenza, 1957-1966. , 1974, American journal of epidemiology.

[6]  J. Mullooly,et al.  Underestimation of the role of pneumonia and influenza in causing excess mortality. , 1981, American journal of public health.

[7]  D. Alling,et al.  A study of excess mortality during influenza epidemics in the United States, 1968-1976. , 1981, American journal of epidemiology.

[8]  S B Thacker,et al.  An evaluation of influenza mortality surveillance, 1962-1979. I. Time series forecasts of expected pneumonia and influenza deaths. , 1981, American journal of epidemiology.

[9]  S. Thacker,et al.  Mortality during influenza epidemics in the United States, 1967-1978. , 1982, American journal of public health.

[10]  T. Downs,et al.  Mortality and influenza. , 1982, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[11]  A. Kendal,et al.  Impact of influenza epidemics on mortality in the United States from October 1972 to May 1985. , 1987, American journal of public health.

[12]  S B Thacker,et al.  Application of multiple time series analysis to the estimation of pneumonia and influenza mortality by age 1962-1983. , 1988, Statistics in medicine.

[13]  Lone Simonsen,et al.  A Method for Timely Assessment of Influenza‐Associated Mortality in the United States , 1997, Epidemiology.