Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T22:57:31.291Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Increased influenza-related healthcare utilization by residents of an urban aboriginal community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2011

K. M. CHARLAND*
Affiliation:
Children's Hospital Informatics Program at the Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (CHIP), Boston, MA, USA Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA McGill Clinical and Health Informatics (MCHI), McGill University, Montreal, Canada Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
J. S. BROWNSTEIN
Affiliation:
Children's Hospital Informatics Program at the Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (CHIP), Boston, MA, USA Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
A. VERMA
Affiliation:
McGill Clinical and Health Informatics (MCHI), McGill University, Montreal, Canada Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
T. BREWER
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
S. JONES
Affiliation:
Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Kateri Memorial Hospital Centre, Kahnawá:ke, Canada
A. GATEWOOD HOEN
Affiliation:
Children's Hospital Informatics Program at the Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (CHIP), Boston, MA, USA Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
D. L. BUCKERIDGE
Affiliation:
McGill Clinical and Health Informatics (MCHI), McGill University, Montreal, Canada Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University, Montreal, Canada Office of Surveillance and Epidemiology, Montreal Public Health Department, Montreal, Canada
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr K. M. Charland, 1140 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Québec, Canada, H3A 1A3. (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Most studies describing high rates of acute respiratory illness in aboriginals have focused on rural or remote communities. Hypothesized causes include socioeconomic deprivation, limited access to healthcare, and a high prevalence of chronic disease. To assess influenza rates in an aboriginal community while accounting for healthcare access, deprivation and chronic disease prevalence, we compared rates of influenza-related outpatient and emergency-department visits in an urban Mohawk reserve (Kahnawá:ke) to rates in neighbouring regions with comparable living conditions and then restricted the analysis to a sub-population with a low chronic disease prevalence, i.e. those aged <20 years. Using medical billing claims from 1996 to 2006 we estimated age-sex standardized rate ratios. The rate in Kahnawá:ke was 58% greater than neighbouring regions and 98% greater in the analysis of those aged <20 years. Despite relatively favourable socioeconomic conditions and healthcare access, rates of influenza-related visits in Kahnawá:ke were elevated, particularly in the younger age groups.

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

INTRODUCTION

During the first wave of the influenza A(H1N1) pandemic, First Nations (Indian) reserves in northern Manitoba, Canada experienced high rates of severe influenza infection [Reference Kermode-Scott1]. Prior to the pandemic, studies of aboriginal populations had demonstrated elevated rates of acute respiratory illness [Reference Crighton2Reference Watt11]. The higher incidence of infection and more severe disease were attributed to several factors including deprived living conditions, limited access to primary care, exposure to tobacco smoke and a high prevalence of chronic disease, particularly type II diabetes [Reference MacMillan12Reference Groom14]. However, these hypothesized risk factors vary considerably between First Nations reserves [Reference MacMillan12] and the majority of published research on aboriginal health has focused on communities located in rural or remote regions [Reference Young15] where factors related to community isolation (e.g. limited access to goods/services and healthcare [Reference Harris16, Reference Shah, Gunraj and Hux17]) may contribute to the observed high rates of severe disease.

Kahnawá:ke is a First Nations Mohawk reserve with a population of about 7100 (in 2000), located 10 km south of Montreal (Québec, Canada) on the shores of the St Lawrence river [18]. Socioeconomic conditions in Kahnawá:ke are comparable to those in neighbouring regions. In 1995, Kahnawá:ke's average annual per capita income was about $30000 [Reference Alfred19], slightly higher than the 1996 estimate of $26000 in the adjacent non-reserve neighbourhoods [20]. Further, most males aged >17 years owned cars, suggesting relatively favourable socioeconomic conditions in Kahnawá:ke [Reference Christie21, Reference Carstairs and Morris22].

Compared to Canadians, there is a higher prevalence of certain chronic diseases in the people of Kahnawá:ke, most notably type II diabetes [23] (7·7/100 in Kahnawá:ke in 2001–2003 vs. 4·5/100 in Canadians in 2001) [Reference Horn24]. However, the prevalence is considerably lower than that of other First Nations peoples [Reference Horn24]. Healthcare services are provided free of charge throughout the province to all residents of Quebec and Kahnawá:ke. In fact, healthcare for aboriginals (and non-aboriginals), is accessible on the reserve at the Kateri Memorial Hospital Centre [Reference Alfred19]. This is important as uncontrolled chronic disease may increase risk of infection and severe outcomes [Reference Groom14].

To assess influenza rates in this aboriginal community while accounting for underlying factors such as deprivation and chronic disease, we used medical billing claims from 1996 to 2006 and compared the rates of influenza-related visits in Kahnawá:ke to the rates of visits in the neighbouring regions. Furthermore, we conducted a focused analysis on those aged <20 years as there is a low prevalence of chronic disease in this age group.

DATA AND METHODS

Visits to outpatient clinics and emergency departments (OC/ED)

We obtained records of all OC/ED visits for influenza-like illness from 1996 to 2006 for residents of the Greater Montreal Region from the Regie de l'assurance maladie du Québec (RAMQ). RAMQ is the government agency providing health insurance to 99% of the residents of the province of Québec. Each record contained data describing patient age, sex, census tract of residence, date of visit, and an International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD-9) diagnostic code. A case was defined as a visit to the OC/ED with an ICD-9 code that is associated with influenza. Although the ICD-9 codes 487 are highly specific for influenza, they lack sensitivity as influenza infection is often implicated in other diagnoses such as pneumonia (ICD-9 code 486). Thus we considered several ‘influenza’ case definitions based on subsets of ICD-9 codes representing: influenza, influenza and pneumonia, influenza and bronchitis and all respiratory infections (Table 1). In order to assess the sensitivity of the results to the choice of ICD-9 code sets, we conducted separate analyses for each case definition.

Table 1. Subsets of ICD-9 codes used to define an influenza case

To more closely focus our outcome measure on disease rates rather than healthcare utilization, the number of visits per person was limited to one per influenza season (40th CDC week of one calendar year to the 39th CDC week of the following year). From these records we compiled age-sex strata-specific cumulative counts of cases from 1996 to 2006 for Kahnawá:ke and for Kahnawá:ke's neighbours (Fig. 1). Ethics approval was granted by the McGill University Research Ethics Office (IRB) and by the Onkwata'karitahtshera Health & Social Services Research Council.

Fig. 1. Map of Greater Montreal Region showing Kahnawá:ke and adjacent neighbourhoods.

Census data

For the regions adjacent to Kahnawá:ke, using census tract population sizes reported in the 1996, 2001 and 2006 Canadian censuses, we calculated at-risk person-time for each age-sex stratum, approximating population sizes for inter-censal years by linear interpolation. For Kahnawá:ke, we used data collected from a separate federal government department, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) (www.ainc-inac.gc.ca), because Kahnawá:ke does not participate in the Canadian census. INAC provided population sizes for Mohawks living on the Kahnawá:ke reserve, by age and sex for each individual year (1996–2005).

Statistical analyses

We standardized rates of OC/ED visits to the 2001 Montreal population distribution. For each influenza year and overall, we calculated age- and sex-standardized rate ratios (RR) and corresponding confidence intervals (CI) representing the risk associated with living on the Kahnawá:ke reserve relative to the risk associated with living in adjacent neighbourhoods. Age groups were 0–4, 5–9, 10–14, 15–19, 20–39, 40–64 and ⩾65 years. In a separate analysis of those aged <20 years we estimated standardized rate ratios in a similar manner.

RESULTS

The age distributions of the two regions were similar. In Kahnawá:ke, 27% of the population were aged <20 years, compared to 28% in the neighbouring region. Using the most specific definition of influenza, from 1996 to 2006, the OC/ED visit rate was 33% higher for residents of Kahnawá:ke compared to residents of adjacent neighbourhoods (RR 1·33, 95% CI 1·26–1·41) (Table 2). The increased risk was more pronounced in the <20-year-old populations with influenza-related visit rates in Kahnawá:ke 98% greater than rates in adjacent communities (RR 2·15, 95% CI 1·94–2·37). The elevation in rates in Kahnawá:ke persisted regardless of the choice of ICD-9 code set, although the rate differential was not as marked for the most inclusive set of respiratory infection diagnoses (RR 1·08, 95% CI 1·06–1·09) (Tables 1 and 2). Higher rates in Kahnawá:ke residents were observed for all years from 1996 to 2006 (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2. Age- and sex-standardized rate ratio and 95% confidence intervals for all ages and for analysis restricted to those aged <20 years for each influenza season. Asterisk (*) indicates influenza seasons in which the vaccine conferred little protection. □, All ages (n=487); ▪, <20 years (n=487); ○, All ages (n=486 and 487); •, <20 years (n=486 and 487).

Table 2. Standardized rate ratios and confidence intervals for 1996–2006 representing Kahnawá:ke rates relative to rates of adjacent neighbourhoods, for the general population and for the population aged <20 years

DISCUSSION

Residents of a prosperous, urban, aboriginal reserve with accessible healthcare were 58% more likely to have an influenza-related OC/ED visit than adjacent but predominantly non-aboriginal communities with comparable living conditions. Furthermore, the elevation in rates was even more pronounced in the analysis of an age group with a relatively low prevalence of chronic disease, i.e. those aged <20 years. Although we could not account for community differences in vaccination uptake, the rates remained elevated during the two influenza years in which there was a poor antigenic match between the vaccine and the circulating strain.

Previous studies of aboriginal populations have demonstrated high rates of respiratory diseases such as respiratory syncytial virus, invasive pneumococcal disease and tuberculosis [Reference Crighton2, Reference MacMillan12, Reference Bockova25, Reference Cortese26]. Hildes et al. [Reference Hildes27] studied the incidence of several respiratory infectious diseases in an ‘Arctic Indian’ community in the Yukon Territory from 1958 to 1961 and documented a high attack rate of influenza A. Using data from Ontario, Canada, Crighton et al. found a marked relationship between county-level hospitalization rates for pneumonia and influenza and county percentages of aboriginals [Reference Crighton2]. However, in Canada, about half of aboriginals live in remote or rural areas with some reserves accessible only by air [28]. Socioeconomic deprivation is common due to limited access to goods and services and many of these communities have inadequate access to primary care [Reference Groom14, Reference Harris16, Reference Shah, Gunraj and Hux17]. Therefore factors other than a greater susceptibility to influenza infection may explain their findings.

In Kahnawá:ke the rate of type II diabetes is about 70% higher than that of the Canadian population [Reference Horn24] and type II diabetes is a risk factor for severe influenza infection [Reference Diepersloot, Bouter and Hoekstra29]. Although, in recent years, there has been an increasing prevalence of type II diabetes in the paediatric population, according to the Québec Region First Nations Regional Health Survey there were no observed cases among the 7·4% of First Nations children that had been tested [30]. Even though overt type II diabetes may not explain the high influenza rates in Kahnawá:ke's youth, 40% of Québec's First Nations children are obese (vs. 23% of children in Québec) and obesity has recently been implicated in severe respiratory infection [Reference Rantala31Reference Morgan33]. On the other hand, Peck et al. found that, compared to non-aboriginal children, aboriginal children and in particular infants have higher rates of lower respiratory tract infections [Reference Peck8]; a finding not easily explained by underlying chronic disease.

It is likely that the high rates of smoking in Kahnawá:ke have contributed to the increased influenza rates for all age groups. Due to its inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects, smoking increases susceptibility to infection [Reference Gualano34, Reference Sopori35]. Although smoking rates differ between aboriginal communities, more than 50% of Québec's First Nations adults and adolescents smoke [36], compared to fewer than 25% in the non-reserve region surrounding Kahnawá:ke (i.e. Monteregie) [37].

We measured OC/ED visits to estimate influenza infection rates, an approach used by others to compare burdens of illness between aboriginal and non-aboriginal populations for diseases such as bronchiolitis and otitis media [Reference Curns38, 39]. Nevertheless, we cannot exclude the possibility that residents of Kahnawá:ke will have a greater tendency to seek care than their neighbours given the same degree of disease severity. However, studies of First Nations communities elsewhere in Canada have demonstrated that although aboriginals experienced substantially higher rates of hospitalizations and premature mortality due to certain diseases, rates of visits to outpatient healthcare settings were not as great suggesting that residents of these communities do not tend to visit outpatient clinics as readily as non-aboriginals given the same burden of disease [Reference Gao40, Reference Martens, Sanderson and Jebamani41]. In addition, Shah et al. [Reference Shah, Gunraj and Hux17] found higher rates of hospital admissions in aboriginals for conditions that may have been prevented through visits to ambulatory care settings. Moreover, they used community controls for socioeconomic conditions and geographic location to show that the higher rates in aboriginals persisted even after controlling for these factors [Reference Shah, Gunraj and Hux17]. Therefore, it is conceivable that rates of OC/ED visits from residents of Kahnawá:ke are not substantially greater than residents of neighbouring regions, given a similar burden of disease.

Although we standardized by age and sex, we did not have access to measures of household composition, size and crowding; factors that could potentially effect influenza transmission rates [Reference MacMillan12, Reference Brownstein, Kleinman and Mandl42, Reference Brownstein and Mandl43]. However, unlike many First Nations reserves that have relatively poor living conditions and large paediatric populations (www.ainc-incac.gc.ca), socioeconomic conditions in Kahnawá:ke are favourable and the age distribution of the population is similar to adjacent regions. Thus, it is unlikely that community differences in these factors can account for the elevated rates in Kahnawá:ke.

Despite there being accessible healthcare in Kahnawá:ke and socioeconomic conditions comparable to those of our reference region, we found a marked increase in rates of influenza-related OC/ED visits from residents of Kahnawá:ke, particularly in the young. The elevated rates in Kahnawá:ke's youth suggest that factors other than a high prevalence of chronic disease may be related to influenza risk. In light of our findings, further study is needed to identify the more important risk factors that contribute to the increased rates of influenza in aboriginal peoples.

NOTE

Supplementary material accompanies this paper on the Journal's website (http://journals.cambridge.org/hyg).

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This work was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (R21AI073591-01), the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health (R21LM009263-01), and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (PAN-83152). The authors gratefully acknowledge the Onkwata'karitahtshera Health & Social Services Research Council, Kim Barker, Luc de Montigny and Kate Zinszer for discussions and guidance. We thank IRIS-Québec and Nadyne Girard for assistance in obtaining data.

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

References

REFERENCES

1.Kermode-Scott, B. Canada has world's highest rate of confirmed cases of A/H1N1, with Aboriginal people hardest hit. British Medical Journal 2009; 339: b2746.Google Scholar
2.Crighton, EJ, et al. A spatial analysis of the determinants of pneumonia and influenza hospitalizations in Ontario (1992–2001). Social Science & Medicine 2007; 64: 16361650.Google Scholar
3.Davidson, M, et al. The epidemiology of invasive pneumococcal disease in Alaska, 1986–1990 – ethnic differences and opportunities for prevention. Journal of Infectious Diseases 1994; 170: 368376.Google Scholar
4.Fraser-Lee, NJ, Hessel, PA. Acute respiratory infections in the Canadian Native Indian population: a review. Canadian Journal of Public Health 1994; 85: 197200.Google Scholar
5.Houston, CS, Weiler, RL, MacKay, RW. Native children's lung. Journal of the Canadian Association of Radiologists 1979; 30: 218222.Google Scholar
6.Mahoney, MC, Ellrott, MA, Michalek, AM. A mortality analysis of Native American in New York State, 1980–86. International Journal of Epidemiology 1989; 18: 403412.Google Scholar
7.Marrie, TJ, et al. Hospitalization for community-acquired pneumonia in Alberta First Nations Aboriginals compared with non-First Nations Albertans. Canadian Respiratory Journal: Journal of the Canadian Thoracic Society 2004; 11: 336342.Google Scholar
8.Peck, AJ, et al. Lower respiratory tract infections among american Indian and Alaska Native children and the general population of U.S. Children. Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal 2005; 24: 342351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9.Rhoades, ER. The major respiratory diseases of American Indians. American Review of Respiratory Disease 1990; 141: 595600.Google Scholar
10.Tomashek, KM, et al. Infant mortality trends and differences between American Indian/Alaska Native infants and white infants in the United States, 1989–1991 and 1998–2000. American Journal of Public Health 2006; 96: 22222227.Google Scholar
11.Watt, JP, et al. Invasive pneumococcal disease among Navajo adults, 1989–1998. Clinical infectious diseases 2004; 38: 496501.Google Scholar
12.MacMillan, HL, et al. Aboriginal health. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 15691578.Google Scholar
13.Fidelman, C. Kahnawake takes swine flu seriously. The Gazette, 4 August 2009.Google Scholar
14.Groom, AV, et al. Pandemic influenza preparedness and vulnerable populations in tribal communities. American Journal of Public Health 2009; 99 (Suppl. 2): S271–278.Google Scholar
15.Young, TK. Review of research on aboriginal populations in Canada: relevance to their health needs. British Medical Journal 2003; 327: 419422.Google Scholar
16.Harris, SB, et al. Disease patterns among Canadian aboriginal children. Study in a remote rural setting. Canadian Family Physician 1998; 44: 18691877.Google Scholar
17.Shah, BR, Gunraj, N, Hux, JE. Markers of access to and quality of primary care for aboriginal people in Ontario, Canada. American Journal of Public Health 2003; 93: 798802.Google Scholar
18.Mohawk Council of Kahnawake. Onkwaná:ta (Community) (http://wwwkahnawakecom/community). Accessed 5 March 2010.Google Scholar
19.Alfred, GR. Heeding the Voices of our Ancestors: Kahnawake Mohawk Politics and the Rise of Native Nationalism. Toronto, New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, pp. 220.Google Scholar
20.Statistics Canada. Sources of income, family and household income 20% sample (table). In: 1996 census of population [43 large urban centres, census tracts (neighbourhoods)] (database) using E-STAT (distributor): Statistics Canada, 1996. Accessed 15 February 2010.Google Scholar
21.Christie, G. Aboriginality and Governance: A Multidisciplinary Perspective from Quebec. Penticton, B.C.: Theytus Books, 2006, pp. 383.Google Scholar
22.Carstairs, V, Morris, R. Deprivation and health in Scotland. Health Bulletin (Edinburgh) 1990; 48: 162175.Google Scholar
23.RHS Quick Facts! Assembly of First Nations Chiefs Committee on Health, 2007.Google Scholar
24.Horn, OK, et al. Incidence and prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the First Nation community of Kahnawa:ke, Quebec, Canada, 1986–2003. Canadian Journal of Public Health 2007; 98: 438443.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
25.Bockova, J, et al. Respiratory syncytial virus infection in Navajo and White Mountain Apache children. Pediatrics 2002; 110: e20.Google Scholar
26.Cortese, MM, et al. High incidence rates of invasive pneumococcal disease in the White Mountain Apache population. Archives of Internal Medicine 1992; 152: 22772282.Google Scholar
27.Hildes, JA, et al. Surveys of respiratory virus antibodies in an Arctic Indian population. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1965; 93: 10151018.Google Scholar
28.First Nations in Ontario. Ontario Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs, 2008.Google Scholar
29.Diepersloot, RJ, Bouter, KP, Hoekstra, JB. Influenza infection and diabetes mellitus. Case for annual vaccination. Diabetes Care 1990; 13: 876882.Google Scholar
30.Report on First Nations Living in Communities. First Nation of Quebec and Labrador Health and Social Services Commission, 2006.Google Scholar
31.Rantala, A, et al. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is associated with elevated body mass index in young men. Epidemiology and Infection 2010; 138: 12671273.Google Scholar
32.He, QQ, et al. Respiratory health in overweight and obese Chinese children. Pediatric Pulmonology 2009; 44: 997–1002.Google Scholar
33.Morgan, OW, et al. Morbid obesity as a risk factor for hospitalization and death due to 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) disease. PLoS One; 5: e9694.Google Scholar
34.Gualano, RC, et al. Cigarette smoke worsens lung inflammation and impairs resolution of influenza infection in mice. Respiratory Research 2008; 9: 53.Google Scholar
35.Sopori, M. Effects of cigarette smoke on the immune system. Nature reviews. Immunology 2002; 2: 372377.Google Scholar
36.Tobacco Report. First Nation of Quebec and Labrador Health and Social Services Commission, 2006.Google Scholar
37.Statistics Canada. Canadian Community Health Survey, 2003. Accessed 16 March 2010.Google Scholar
38.Curns, AT, et al. Outpatient and hospital visits associated with otitis media among American Indian and Alaska native children younger than 5 years. Pediatrics 2002; 109: E41–41.Google Scholar
39.CDC. Bronchiolitis-associated outpatient visits and hospitalizations among American Indian and Alaska Native children – United States, 1990–2000. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 2003; 52: 707710.Google Scholar
40.Gao, S, et al. Access to health care among status Aboriginal people with chronic kidney disease. Canadian Medical Association Journal 2008; 179: 10071012.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
41.Martens, PJ, Sanderson, D, Jebamani, L. Health services use of Manitoba First Nations people: is it related to underlying need? Canadian Journal of Public Health 2005; 96 (Suppl. 1): S39–44.Google Scholar
42.Brownstein, JS, Kleinman, KP, Mandl, KD. Identifying pediatric age groups for influenza vaccination using a real-time regional surveillance system. American Journal of Epidemiology 2005; 162: 686693.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
43.Brownstein, JS, Mandl, KD. Pediatric population size is associated with geographic patterns of acute respiratory infections among adults. Annals of Emergency Medicine 2008; 52: 6368.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Subsets of ICD-9 codes used to define an influenza case

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Map of Greater Montreal Region showing Kahnawá:ke and adjacent neighbourhoods.

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Age- and sex-standardized rate ratio and 95% confidence intervals for all ages and for analysis restricted to those aged <20 years for each influenza season. Asterisk (*) indicates influenza seasons in which the vaccine conferred little protection. □, All ages (n=487); ▪, <20 years (n=487); ○, All ages (n=486 and 487); •, <20 years (n=486 and 487).

Figure 3

Table 2. Standardized rate ratios and confidence intervals for 1996–2006 representing Kahnawá:ke rates relative to rates of adjacent neighbourhoods, for the general population and for the population aged <20 years

Supplementary material: File

Charland Supplementary Materials

Charland Supplementary Tables

Download Charland Supplementary Materials(File)
File 35.3 KB