Abstract: Background: Italy, particularly the northern region of Lombardy, has experienced very high rates of COVID-19 cases and deaths. Several indicators, i.e., the number of new positive cases, deaths and hospitalizations, have been used to monitor virus spread, but all suffer from biases. The aim of this study was to evaluate an alternative data source from Emergency Medical Service (EMS) activities for COVID-19 monitoring. Methods: Calls to the emergency number (112) in Lombardy (years 2015–2022) were studied and their overlap with the COVID-19 pandemic, influenza and official mortality peaks were evaluated. Modeling it as a counting process, a specific cause contribution (i.e., COVID-19 symptoms, the “signal”) was identified and enucleated from all other contributions (the “background”), and the latter was subtracted from the total observed number of calls using statistical methods for excess event estimation. Results: A total of 6,094,502 records were analyzed and filtered for respiratory and cardiological symptoms to identify potential COVID-19 patients, yielding 742,852 relevant records. Results show that EMS data mirrored the time series of cases or deaths in Lombardy, with good agreement also being found with seasonal flu outbreaks. Conclusions: This novel approach, combined with a machine learning predictive approach, could be a powerful public health tool to signal the start of disease outbreaks and monitor the spread of infectious diseases.

Data from emergency medical service activities: a novel approach to monitoring COVID-19 and other infectious diseases / Del Re, Daniele; Palla, Luigi; Meridiani, Paolo; Soffi, Livia; Loiudice, Michele Tancredi; Antinozzi, Martina; Cattaruzza, Maria Sofia. - In: DIAGNOSTICS. - ISSN 2075-4418. - 15:6(2025). [10.3390/diagnostics15020181]

Data from emergency medical service activities: a novel approach to monitoring COVID-19 and other infectious diseases

del Re, Daniele
Co-primo
;
Palla, Luigi
Co-primo
;
Meridiani, Paolo;Soffi, Livia;Loiudice, Michele Tancredi;Antinozzi, Martina
Penultimo
;
Cattaruzza, Maria Sofia
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

Abstract: Background: Italy, particularly the northern region of Lombardy, has experienced very high rates of COVID-19 cases and deaths. Several indicators, i.e., the number of new positive cases, deaths and hospitalizations, have been used to monitor virus spread, but all suffer from biases. The aim of this study was to evaluate an alternative data source from Emergency Medical Service (EMS) activities for COVID-19 monitoring. Methods: Calls to the emergency number (112) in Lombardy (years 2015–2022) were studied and their overlap with the COVID-19 pandemic, influenza and official mortality peaks were evaluated. Modeling it as a counting process, a specific cause contribution (i.e., COVID-19 symptoms, the “signal”) was identified and enucleated from all other contributions (the “background”), and the latter was subtracted from the total observed number of calls using statistical methods for excess event estimation. Results: A total of 6,094,502 records were analyzed and filtered for respiratory and cardiological symptoms to identify potential COVID-19 patients, yielding 742,852 relevant records. Results show that EMS data mirrored the time series of cases or deaths in Lombardy, with good agreement also being found with seasonal flu outbreaks. Conclusions: This novel approach, combined with a machine learning predictive approach, could be a powerful public health tool to signal the start of disease outbreaks and monitor the spread of infectious diseases.
2025
COVID-19; emergency medical services; pandemic; excess mortality estimation; infectious diseases
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Data from emergency medical service activities: a novel approach to monitoring COVID-19 and other infectious diseases / Del Re, Daniele; Palla, Luigi; Meridiani, Paolo; Soffi, Livia; Loiudice, Michele Tancredi; Antinozzi, Martina; Cattaruzza, Maria Sofia. - In: DIAGNOSTICS. - ISSN 2075-4418. - 15:6(2025). [10.3390/diagnostics15020181]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1747228
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