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Journal Article

Citation

Heitzinger K, Thoroughman DA, Johnson BD, Chandler A, Prather JW, Walls HM, Robeson SD, Porter KA. Disaster Med. Public Health Prep. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Division of Public Health Protection and Safety, Kentucky Department for Public Health, Frankfort, KY.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health, Publisher Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/dmp.2020.4

PMID

32321613

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The 2017 solar eclipse was associated with mass gatherings in many of the 14 states along the path of totality. The Kentucky Department for Public Health implemented an enhanced syndromic surveillance system to detect increases in emergency department (ED) visits and other health care needs near Hopkinsville, Kentucky, where the point of greatest eclipse occurred.

METHODS: EDs flagged visits of patients who participated in eclipse events from August 17-22. Data from 14 area emergency medical services and 26 first-aid stations were also monitored to detect health-related events occurring during the eclipse period.

RESULTS: Forty-four potential eclipse event-related visits were identified, primarily injuries, gastrointestinal illness, and heat-related illness. First-aid stations and emergency medical services commonly attended to patients with pain and heat-related illness.

CONCLUSIONS: Kentucky's experience during the eclipse demonstrated the value of patient visit flagging to describe the disease burden during a mass gathering and to investigate epidemiological links between cases. A close collaboration between public health authorities within and across jurisdictions, health information exchanges, hospitals, and other first-response care providers will optimize health surveillance activities before, during, and after mass gatherings.


Language: en

Keywords

Kentucky; eclipse; mass gathering; public health systems; syndromic surveillance

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