Google searches reveal effect of chickenpox vaccinations

Digital epidemiological approach can predict seasonal outbreaks and shows effectiveness of vaccination.

Person doing a search on the Google website

Surveillance is critical to improving public health in relation to infectious diseases, but it can be made difficult by under reporting, language barriers and logistical issues. 

Researchers took a digital epidemiological approach and looked at Google search queries for ‘chicken pox’ over an 11-year period in 36 countries. They found that Google Trends data can act as a proxy for disease incidence and that real-time data can predict the timing and severity of seasonal outbreaks. 

Reporting in PNAS (online, 31 May 2016)[1]
, the team also found that countries implementing public varicella zoster virus (VSV) vaccination programmes showed significantly reduced seasonality in Google Trends data compared with other countries. 

The authors say that the findings highlight the potential of digital epidemiology as an additional surveillance tool, as well as the population-level impact of VZV vaccination. 

References

[1] Bakker KM, Martinez-Bakker ME, Helm B et al. Digital epidemiology reveals global childhood disease seasonality and the effects of immunization. PNAS 2016. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1523941113

Last updated
Citation
Clinical Pharmacist, CP, July 2016, Vol 8, No 7;8(7):DOI:10.1211/PJ.2016.20201249

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