2008 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers’ National Poison Data System (NPDS): 26th Annual Report. Bronstein AC, Spyker DA, Cantilena LR, Green JL, Rumack BH, Giffin SL. Clin Toxicol (T and F) 2009; 47(10): 911-1084.
Abstract; Background: This is the 26th Annual Report of the American Association
of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC; http://www. aapcc.org ) National
Poison Data System (NPDS). During 2008, 60 of the nation’s 61 US poison
centers uploaded case data automatically. The median upload time was 24
7.2, 112. (median 25%, 75%.) minutes creating a real-time national
exposure and information database and surveillance system. Methodology:
We analyzed the case data tabulating specific indices from NPDS. The
methodology was similar to that of previous years. Where changes were
introduced, the differences are identified. Poison center cases with
medical outcomes of death were evaluated by a team of 28 medical and
clinical toxicologist reviewers using an ordinal scale of 1-6 to
determine Relative Contribution to Fatality (RCF) from the exposure to
the death. Results: In 2008, 4,333,012 calls were captured by NPDS:
2,491,049 closed human exposure cases, 130,495 animal exposures,
1,703,762 information calls, 7,336 human confirmed nonexposures, and
370 animal confirmed nonexposures. The top five substances most
frequently involved in all human exposures were analgesics (13.3%),
cosmetics/personal care products (9.0%), household cleaning substances
(8.6%), sedatives/hypnotics/antipsychotics (6.6%), and foreign
bodies/toys/miscellaneous (5.2%). The top five most common exposures in
children age 5 or less were cosmetics/personal care products (13.5%),
analgesics (9.7%), household cleaning substances (9.7%), foreign
bodies/toys/miscellaneous (7.5%), and topical preparations (6.9%). Drug
identification requests comprised 66.8% of all information calls. NPDS
documented 1,756 human exposures resulting in death with 1,315 human
fatalities deemed related with an RCF of at least contributory (1, 2,
or 3). Conclusions: Poisoning continues to be a significant cause of
morbidity and mortality in the US. The near real-time, always current
status of NPDS represents a national resource to collect and monitor US
poisoning exposure cases and information calls. NPDS continues its
mission as one of the few real-time national surveillance systems in
existence, providing a model public health surveillance system for all
types of exposures, public health event identification, resilience
response and situational awareness tracking.