Project 462643
The Canadian Severe Acute Respiratory Infection, Prospective, Perpetual Observational Study: Informing Clinical Care and the Public Health Response
The Canadian Severe Acute Respiratory Infection, Prospective, Perpetual Observational Study: Informing Clinical Care and the Public Health Response
Project Information
| Study Type: | Unclear |
| Research Theme: | Clinical |
Institution & Funding
| Principal Investigator(s): | Fowler, Robert A; Murthy, Srinivas |
| Co-Investigator(s): | Archambault, Patrick; Carrier, François M; Cheng, Matthew P; Christian, Michael D; Cook, Deborah J; Douglas, James J; Fontela, Patricia S; Griesdale, Donald; Guerguerian, Anne-Marie; Jaworsky, Denise W; Joffe, Ari R; Jouvet, Philippe A; Katz, Kevin C; Kho, Michelle E; Kumar, Deepali; Kutsogiannis, Demitrios J; Lamontagne, Francois; Lee, Todd C; Marshall, John C; McGeer, Allison J; Menon, Kusum; Pinto, Ruxandra; Rewa, Oleksa G; Stelfox, Henry T; Tsang, Jennifer L; Turgeon, Alexis F; Zarychanski, Ryan |
| Institution: | Sunnybrook Research Institute (Toronto, Ontario) |
| CIHR Institute: | Circulatory and Respiratory Health |
| Program: | |
| Peer Review Committee: | Public, Community & Population Health |
| Competition Year: | 2022 |
| Term: | 3 yrs 0 mth |
Abstract Summary
Severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) is a major public health problem. Recent outbreaks of pandemic influenza viruses and coronaviruses have taught us not only that these viruses can lead to severe illness and death, but also that it can take a long time between the start of an outbreak and when the health care system knows enough about the illness to guide public health policy and clinical care. Each year since 2016, with a network of hospitals and infectious diseases and critical care clinicians, we have described severe respiratory infection in Canadian hospitals, the viruses and bacteria that cause people to get sick, treatments they receive, and how often it leads to patients needing critical care or dying. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, this team of 52 adult and children's hospitals worked in collaboration with the World Health Organization and partners in other countries to describe severe illness from this new virus. We rapidly found that hospitalized patients were typically older, more commonly men and often had pre-existing medical problems. Of patients who were sick enough to need admission to the intensive care unit, about 30% unfortunately still died; however, this was a lower death rate than in many other countries hit hard by the pandemic. This ongoing study will continue to describe whether patterns of illness change across future pandemic waves with new variants and will provide a way to rapidly study common and new respiratory infections in the future to inform policy and practice.
No special research characteristics identified
This project does not include any of the advanced research characteristics tracked in our database.