Volume 10, Number 2—February 2004
THEME ISSUE
2004 SARS Edition
Preparedness and Response
Body Temperature Monitoring and SARS Fever Hotline, Taiwan
Table 1
Diagnoses reported for callers by recorded body temperature, Taipei SARS fever hotline, June 1–10, 2003 (n = 1,966)a
Body temperature | |||
---|---|---|---|
Diagnosis or
syndrome |
Fever ≥38°C
n (%) |
No fever
n (%) |
Unknown/unrecorded |
Possible SARS |
5 (1.3) |
2 (0.3) |
11 (1.2) |
Respiratory |
65 (17.2) |
99 (15.6) |
40 (4.2) |
Dermatologic |
0 (0) |
1 (0.2) |
3 (0.3) |
Head-relatedb |
6 (1.6) |
10 (1.6) |
2 (0.2) |
Gastrointestinal |
21 (5.6) |
47 (7.4) |
14 (1.5) |
Genitourinary |
7 (1.9) |
8 (1.3) |
4 (0.4) |
Other |
27 (7.1) |
31 (4.9) |
50 (5.2) |
Unknown/missing |
247 (65.3) |
436 (68.8) |
830 (87.0) |
Total | 378 | 634 | 954 |
aSARS, severe acute respiratory syndrome.
bIncludes neurologic.
¹SARS International Field Team: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA: Peter B. Bloland; Stephanie H. Factor; Alexandre Macedo de Oliveira, assigned to Nebraska Department of Health; Melissa A Marx, assigned to New York City Department of Health; Sarah Y. Park; John T. Watson, assigned to Chicago Department of Public Health; Susan Wang; David Wong; William Wong, assigned to San Francisco Department of Public Health; Global Alert and Response, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland: Kande-Bure O’Bai Kamara and Howard Sobel.