Researchers examined data on 1,422 adults hospitalized with a
respiratory illness or a high fever at four hospitals in Tennessee
during the flu seasons from 2006 to 2012. The study team tested all
the patients for influenza, regardless of whether the patients’
doctors had ordered tests.
Overall, only 399 patients had influenza tests ordered by their
physicians, the study found. Seventy-seven of these patients turned
out to actually have the flu.
Tests ordered by the researchers were positive for flu in another 59
patients, or nearly 6 percent of the group that didn’t have flu
tests ordered by their physicians.
Patients whose doctors ordered flu tests tended to be younger,
around 58 years old on average, versus 66 for people who didn’t get
tests.
This suggests many of the older patients with flu would have gone
undiagnosed and untreated, said senior study author Dr. H. Keipp
Talbot, a health policy researcher at Vanderbilt University Medical
Center in Nashville, Tennessee.
“If influenza is not considered as a potential cause of the illness,
it is unlikely that the patient will be treated for influenza,”
Talbot said by email.
Treatment with oseltamivir (Tamiflu) can shorten the severity and
duration of flu symptoms, Talbot noted, and it is also sometimes
prescribed to spouses, caregivers or family members to help prevent
the spread of influenza to other vulnerable older adults.
“This is key for preventing outbreaks in senior centers, nursing
homes, and assisted living facilities,” Talbot said.
Sometimes older adults aren’t tested for influenza because they
don’t get a high fever, one of the classic symptoms, Talbot noted.
But the older adults in the current study did have fever or other
symptoms of respiratory illness that would make them good candidates
for testing.
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Patients in the study were more likely to get flu tests ordered by
providers if they had influenza-like illness than if they did not.
However, classic symptoms of flu were less common in older adults
than in younger patients, the study found.
Beyond its small size, other limitations of the study include the
potential that results from Tennessee patents don’t reflect what
would happen with testing elsewhere.
Newer rapid influenza tests might also impact how often physicians
check patients for influenza, the authors note in the Journal of the
American Geriatrics Society.
Even so, the study results offer fresh evidence that physicians
should consider testing older hospitalized adults for influenza even
when patients lack classic symptoms, said Dr. Hilary Babcock, an
infectious disease professor at Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“In cases where the classic signs and symptoms may not appear,
providers are less likely to think of the diagnosis,” Babcock said
by email. “This type of study can help to educate providers about
variability in symptoms of influenza in different populations so
that during influenza season, they think of influenza more
frequently, even when a patient doesn’t have every classic sign.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Byc7i8 Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society, online February 13, 2018
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