Tracking Patterns of Enteric Illnesses in Populations and Communities Terry Peace and Asit Mazumder Water and Watershed Research Program, Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Abstract Background: Enteric illness arising from contaminated water and food is a major health concern worldwide, and tracking the incidences and severity of outbreaks is still a challenging task. Most developed and developing countries have administrative databases for medical visits and services maintained by the government and/or health insurance authorities. Although these databases could be extremely valuable resources to track patterns of environmental and other health issues, test hypotheses, and develop epidemiologic models and predictions, very little research has been done to develop methods to ensure the robustness of such databases and to demonstrate their utility as a research tool. Objectives: We used the Medical Services Plan (MSP) database of British Columbia, Canada, to develop innovative ways to use medical billing and fee-for-services data to track long-term patterns of enteric illness at the level of populations and communities. Results: To illustrate the power and robustness of the method, we provided several examples covering 8 years of data from each of four communities covering a large range of population size. Not only could this method generalize to other diseases for which specific fee item markers can be found, but also it gives results consistent with a known outbreak and yields data patterns, which could not be revealed by the currently used methods. Because diagnostic code and fee item data for medical services are collected by most medical insurance agencies, our method can have global applications for tracking enteric and other illnesses at the level of populations and communities. Key words: diagnostic code, drinking water, enteric illness, fee item data, Medical Services Plan, methods for tracking enteric disease, waterborne disease. Environ Health Perspect 115:58–64 (2007) . doi:10.1289/ehp.9199 available via http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 14 September 2006] Address correspondence to A. Mazumder, Water and Watershed Research Program, University of Victoria, 116 Petch Building, 3800 Finnerty Rd., Victoria V8P 5C2, BC Canada. Telphone: (250) 472-4789. Fax: (250) 472-4766. E-mail: mazumder@uvic.ca We thank the British Columbia Ministry of Health for support to permit the first preliminary aspects of this study and for the provision of analytical software, and the British Columbia Medical Services Plan for provision of the data. This manuscript benefited from the reviews and comments from two anonymous reviewers on a previous version of this paper. This project was funded by Industrial Research Chair Award by Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to A.M., and its private partners. The authors declare they have no competing financial interests. Received 24 March 2006 ; accepted 14 September 2006. The full version of this article is available for free in HTML or PDF formats. |