4.4 Article

Use of Emergency Department Data to Monitor and Respond to an Increase in Opioid Overdoses in New Hampshire, 2011-2015

Journal

PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTS
Volume 132, Issue -, Pages 73S-79S

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0033354917707934

Keywords

syndromic surveillance; heroin; opioid; emergency department data

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  2. National Syndromic Surveillance Program
  3. Hospital Preparedness Program and Public Health Emergency Preparedness [1U50OE000065-01, 5U90TP000535-04]

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Objectives: Opioid-related overdoses and deaths in New Hampshire have increased substantially in recent years, similar to increases observed across the United States. We queried emergency department (ED) data in New Hampshire to monitor opioid-related ED encounters as part of the public health response to this health problem. Methods: We obtained data on opioid-related ED encounters for the period January 1, 2011, through December 31, 2015, from New Hampshire's syndromic surveillance ED data system by querying for (1) chief complaint text related to the words fentanyl,'' heroin,'' opiate,'' and opioid'' and (2) opioid-related International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes. We then analyzed the data to calculate frequencies of opioid-related ED encounters by age, sex, residence, chief complaint text values, and ICD codes. Results: Opioid-related ED encounters increased by 70% during the study period, from 3300 in 2011 to 5603 in 2015; the largest increases occurred in adults aged 18-29 and in males. Of 20994 total opioid-related ED visits, we identified 18554 (88%) using ICD code alone, 690 (3%) using chief complaint text alone, and 1750 (8%) using both chief complaint text and ICD code. For those encounters identified by ICD code only, the corresponding chief complaint text included varied and nonspecific words, with the most common being pain'' (n - 3335, 18%), overdose'' (n - 1555, 8%), suicidal'' (n - 816, 4%), drug'' (n - 803, 4%), and detox'' (n - 750, 4%). Heroin-specific encounters increased by 827%, from 4% of opioid-related encounters in 2011 to 24% of encounters in 2015. Conclusions: Opioid-related ED encounters in New Hampshire increased substantially from 2011 to 2015. Data from New Hampshire's ED syndromic surveillance system provided timely situational awareness to public health partners to support the overall response to the opioid epidemic.

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