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Low but highly variable mortality among nurses and physicians during the influenza pandemic of 1918–1919

机译:在1918-1919年的流感大流行期间护士和医生的死亡率低但差异很大

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Please cite this paper as: Shanks et al. (2011) Low but highly variable mortality among nurses and physicians during the influenza pandemic of 1918–1919. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses DOI: 10.1111/j.1750‐2659.2010.00195.x. >Background  During the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic, nurses and physicians were intensively exposed to the pandemic A/H1N1 strain. There are few published summaries of the mortality experiences of nurses and physicians during the pandemic. >Methods  Mortality records from U.S. and British Armies during the First World War and obituary notices in national medical association journals were reviewed to ascertain death notices of nurses and physicians likely to have died of influenza. >Results  Illness‐related mortality among U.S. military nurses (1·05%) was one and one‐half times higher than among U.S. medical officers (0·68%), nearly two times higher than among British medical officers (0·55%), and nine times higher than among British nurses (0·12%). Among U.S. nursing officers, mortality was approximately twice as high among those assigned in the United States than in Europe. Among civilian physicians, mortality during the influenza pandemic was markedly increased in Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and the United States but not Australia. >Conclusions  During the 1918 pandemic, mortality among nurses and physicians was relatively low compared to their patients and significantly varied across locations and settings. Medical‐care providers (particularly U.S. nursing officers) who were new to their assignments when pandemic‐related epidemics occurred may have had higher risk of influenza‐related mortality because of occupational exposures to bacterial respiratory pathogens that they had not previously encountered.
机译:请将此文件引用为:Shanks等。 (2011)在1918-1919年的流感大流行期间,护士和医生的死亡率低但差异很大。流感和其他呼吸道病毒DOI:10.1111 / j.1750-2659.2010.00195.x。 >背景在1918年至1919年的流感大流行中,护士和医生被密集暴露于A / H1N1大流行毒株。关于大流行期间护士和医生的死亡经历的公开摘要很少。 >方法审查了第一次世界大战期间美国和英国军队的死亡率记录以及全国医学协会期刊上的ob告,以确认可能死于流感的护士和医生的死亡通知。 >结果美国军队护士的疾病相关死亡率(1·05%)比美国医务人员(0·68%)高一倍半,比英国医疗人员高近两倍。官员(0·55%),比英国护士(0·12%)高9倍。在美国护理人员中,在美国分配的死亡率大约是欧洲的两倍。在民用医生中,在加拿大,新西兰,南非和美国,流感大流行期间的死亡率显着增加,但在澳大利亚没有。 >结论在1918年的大流行中,护士和医生的死亡率与其病人相比相对较低,并且在各地和地区之间存在显着差异。在与大流行相关的流行病发生时刚开始工作的医疗服务提供者(尤其是美国护理人员)可能由于与细菌性呼吸道病原体的职业接触而从未接触过,因此与流感相关的死亡风险更高。

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