Optimizing Clinical Management of Febrile Respiratory Illnesses During a SARS Outbreak in Respiratory Season

Khan K, P Muennig, M Gardam and J Graff Zivin, “Optimizing Clinical Management of Febrile Respiratory Illnesses During a SARS Outbreak in Respiratory Season,” Emerging Infectious Diseases, 11(2005): 191-200.

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Since the World Health Organization declared the global outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) contained in July 2003, new cases have periodically reemerged in Asia. This situation has placed hospitals and health officials worldwide on heightened alert. In a future outbreak, rapidly and accurately distinguishing SARS from other common febrile respiratory illnesses (FRIs) could be difficult. We constructed a decision-analysis model to identify the most efficient strategies for managing undifferentiated FRIs within a hypothetical SARS outbreak in New York City during the season of respiratory infections. If establishing reliable epidemiologic links were not possible, societal costs would exceed $2.0 billion per month. SARS testing with existing polymerase chain reaction assays would have harmful public health and economic consequences if SARS made up <0.1% of circulating FRIs. Increasing influenza vaccination rates among the general population before the onset of respiratory season would save both money and lives.

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Outcome versus Service Based Payments in Health Care: Lessons from African Traditional Healers