Martha’s Vineyard Boards of Health Tick-Borne Illness Initiative MDPH Internship 2012 Hannah Emily Nichols
Martha’s Vineyard Martha’s Vineyard is an island off the coast of MA Year-round population: 20,000 Summer population: 100,000 Tick-borne illnesses are endemic on the island High deer population Mild climate Vast undeveloped land
Tick-Borne Illness Initiative Mission: To reduce the incidence and medical consequences of tick-borne illnesses through public education and modification of disease transmission vectors Island-Wide Board of Selectman Resolution Public Education Resident population, tourist population, website and videos Medical Education Standard of care: Prophylatic vs. symptomatic treatment Environmental Outside workers; landscape of the island, deer population
MDPH Internship Assess under-reporting of Lyme disease on Martha’s Vineyard 2010 25 confirmed cases of Lyme disease reported to CDC Island pharmacies filled enough Doxycycline prescriptions to treat >1200 patients for Lyme disease
Confirmed Cases Patient must have “Bulls Eye” or Erythema migrans rash (<40% of Island cases have the EM rash) OR have positive lab testing (many cases are diagnosed and treated based on symptoms, without lab testing) Positive Results are often reported to public health department of patient’s primary residence Physician offices lack time and financial resources to do the paperwork
Incidence Data for TBI: A New Approach Goal : Retrospectively collect incidence data of Tick- borne illnesses (TBI) Methods : Total number of Doxycycline prescriptions and total numbers of doses (tablets and pills) were collected from island pharmacies for years Number of prescriptions and doses were unavailable for one pharmacy; wholesaler information was used to estimate numbers*
TBI Incidence Findings Methodology CDC Confirmed Cases N/A Doxycycline Doses Doxycycline Pills Per Rx Doxycycline Prescriptions % Probability of Prescriptions
Payor Database Using Doxycycline Rxs as a surrogate for Lyme Disease Physicians and pharmacists interviewed on the island estimated that >90% of Doxycycline prescriptions were used for TBIs Doxycycline Rxs by month for all 5 Island zipcodes, available 2 weeks after the end of the month Rx for 14 days Primary Residence: Martha’s Vineyard, MA, or out-of-state
Incidence Data for TBI: An Old Approach Methods : A Linelist/Spreadsheet approach to Lyme disease was implemented in three private physician offices. Lyme disease patient information was collected from medical records from the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital Emergency Department.
Linelist/Spreadsheet Spreadsheet included the following information: Patient Name, Permanent Address, DOB, Gender, MV Town Prophylaxis for Tick Bite Only (Y/N) Date of Symptom Onset, EM Rash (Y/N), Arthritis (Y/N), Bells Palsy (Y/N), Radiculoneuropathy (Y/N), Lymphocytic Meningitis (Y/N), 2 nd or 3 rd Degree Heart Block (Y/N), Other Lyme Symptoms, Labs Sent (Y/N)
Linelist/Spreadsheet Conclusions The approach identified approximately 100 Lyme disease patients for the month of July Out-of-state residents were identified Time constraints and volume of patients were major barriers for physician offices
MV Hospital Findings 136 patients were tested for Lyme disease in the Emergency Department in July 2012 60 of the patients tested were treated with Doxycycline or Amoxicillin and identified as probable Lyme patients to the MDPH Lab Results: 21/60 tested positive for Lyme disease Symptoms: 11/60 EM Rash, 2/60 Bell’s Palsy Other symptoms: unexplained weakness, joint pain, fatigue, malaise, fever, tick bite
Hospital Findings Cont’d Residence : 27/60 permanent Martha’s Vineyard residents 18/60 off-island MA residents 45/60 total MA residents 15/60 out-of-state residents Other Diagnoses: 11/60 patients were treated with either 21 or 28 days of Doxycycline and were not diagnosed with Lyme but the following: Lyme Disease Risk, Unexplained Weakness, Febrile Illness, Myalgia, Rash
Conclusions Vast discrepancy between reported cases of Lyme and suspected cases of Lyme disease are evident Linelist/Spreadsheet approach increased the number of cases reported and included out-of-state patients Payor Database/Prescription approach is a new way to capture estimated real-time incidence data
Moving Forward Widening the definition of “confirmed” Lyme disease case; or promote reporting of “suspected” cases Apply payor database approach to other diseases in the future; can also capture other trends from the information: Prophylatic vs. therapeutic treatment