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United States Influenza Search Patterns Since the Emergence of COVID-19: Infodemiology Study

Title
United States Influenza Search Patterns Since the Emergence of COVID-19: Infodemiology Study
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2022
Authors
Cai, O
(Author)
Other
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Vol. 8
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-00V-V57
Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN): Background: The emergence and media coverage of COVID-19 may have affected influenza search patterns, possibly affecting influenza surveillance results using Google Trends. Objective: We aimed to investigate if the emergence of COVID-19 was associated with modifications in influenza search patterns in the United States. Methods: We retrieved US Google Trends data (relative number of searches for specified terms) for the topics influenza, Coronavims disease 2019, and symptoms shared between influenza and COVID-19. We calculated the correlations between influenza and COVID-19 search data for a 1-year period after the first COVID-19 diagnosis in the United States (January 21, 2020 to January 20, 2021). We constructed a seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average model and compared predicted search volumes, using the 4 previous years, with Google Trends relative search volume data. We built a similar model for shared symptoms data. We also assessed correlations for the past 5 years between Google Trends influenza data, US Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention influenza-like illness data, and influenza media coverage data. Results: We observed a nonsignificant weak correlation (rho= -0.171; P=0.23) between COVID-19 and influenza Google Trends data. Influenza search volumes for 2020-2021 distinctly deviated from values predicted by seasonal autoregressive integrated moving average models-for 6 weeks within the first 13 weeks after the first COVID-19 infection was confirmed in the United States, the observed volume of searches was higher than the upper bound of 95% confidence intervals for predicted values. Similar results were observed for shared symptoms with influenza and COVID-19 data. The correlation between Google Trends influenza data and CDC influenza-like-illness data decreased after the emergence of COVID-19 (2020-2021: rho=0.643; 2019-2020: rho=0.902), while the correlation between Google Trends influenza data and influenza media coverage volume remained stable (2020-2021: rho=0.746; 2019-2020: rho=0.707). Conclusions: Relevant differences were observed between predicted and observed influenza Google Trends data the year after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. Such differences are possibly due to media coverage, suggesting limitations to the use of Google Trends as a flu surveillance tool.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 16
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