AI Article Synopsis

  • About one-third of Dutch people have allergic rhinitis, specifically hay fever, prompting the development of a 5-day hay fever forecast for those allergic to grass pollen.
  • The study used multiple regression analysis to create a two-step prediction model, incorporating both weather data and patient symptom diaries from 80 grass pollen allergy sufferers during the 2007 and 2008 pollen seasons.
  • The final forecasting model displayed good predictive accuracy for hay fever symptoms, with an R² value of 0.81, and showed a significant agreement (65% to 77%) between the observed and predicted symptom risk categories.

Article Abstract

One-third of the Dutch population suffers from allergic rhinitis, including hay fever. In this study, a 5-day-ahead hay fever forecast was developed and validated for grass pollen allergic patients in the Netherlands. Using multiple regression analysis, a two-step pollen and hay fever symptom prediction model was developed using actual and forecasted weather parameters, grass pollen data and patient symptom diaries. Therefore, 80 patients with a grass pollen allergy rated the severity of their hay fever symptoms during the grass pollen season in 2007 and 2008. First, a grass pollen forecast model was developed using the following predictors: (1) daily means of grass pollen counts of the previous 10 years; (2) grass pollen counts of the previous 2-week period of the current year; and (3) maximum, minimum and mean temperature (R (2)=0.76). The second modeling step concerned the forecasting of hay fever symptom severity and included the following predictors: (1) forecasted grass pollen counts; (2) day number of the year; (3) moving average of the grass pollen counts of the previous 2 week-periods; and (4) maximum and mean temperatures (R (2)=0.81). Since the daily hay fever forecast is reported in three categories (low-, medium- and high symptom risk), we assessed the agreement between the observed and the 1- to 5-day-ahead predicted risk categories by kappa, which ranged from 65 % to 77 %. These results indicate that a model based on forecasted temperature and grass pollen counts performs well in predicting symptoms of hay fever up to 5 days ahead.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00484-013-0692-5DOI Listing

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