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SURVEILLANCE AND MONITORING

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Title: SURVEILLANCE AND MONITORING


1
PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEILLANCE
2
SURVEILLANCE AND MONITORING
  • Health Surveillance -- the collection, analysis
    and interpretation of data on individuals or
    groups to detect the occurrence of certain events
    and their putative causes for (1) the purpose of
    prevention or control of certain diseases and
    other health conditions, (2) formulation of
    interventions, and (3) evaluation of the impact
    of programs
  • Generally, surveillance requires three functions
    in this sequence (1) data collection, (2)
    analysis and interpretations, and (3) decision
    making

3
  • Surveillance may be performed using data from a
    variety of sources
  • Mortality Data derived from death certificates
    and population censuses analyze by census tract
    characteristics such as geographic regions and
    socioeconomic status of the population
  • Morbidity and Disability Data derived from
    regularly available sources such as hospitals,
    industry and schools. Morbidity and disability
    data may also be obtained via surveys of
    representative samples of populations -- e.g.,
    National Health Interview Survey, BRFSS

4
  • Specially Designed Data Sources such as cancer
    registries, which combine mortality and morbidity
    and serve many surveillance uses. For example,
    time trends for site-specific cancers, cancer
    control measures, new treatments, and the
    emergence of rare cancers may be identified and
    evaluated using cancer registries

5
  • Biologic Characteristics such as population
    growth, blood pressures, and nutritional status
    may also be the subject of surveillance -- e.g.,
    growth of school children made once a year and
    supplemented by additional information from
    students and parents on nutritional status,
    respiratory functions, etc. Allows comparison of
    such indicators as height and weight of
    equivalent age groups in successive calendar
    years as well as the comparison of annual growth
    rates of various age cohorts

6
PURPOSES OF PUBLICHEALTH SURVEILLANCE
  • Describing trends and the natural (secular)
    history of health problems
  • Detecting epidemics
  • Providing details about patterns of disease
  • Monitoring changes in disease agents through
    laboratory testing
  • Planning and setting health program priorities
  • Evaluating the effects of prevention and control
    measures
  • Detecting critical changes in health practices

7
  • Evaluating hypotheses about the cause of health
    problems
  • Detecting rate but important cases of diseases,
    such as botulism

8
TYPES OF SURVEILLANCE
  • Four general categories of public health
    surveillance
  • Passive Surveillance
  • The most commonly practiced disease surveillance
    at state and local health departments --
    generally used standardized reporting cards or
    forms that are distributed in batches to
    hospitals, clinics, laboratories and other health
    care settings
  • Passive surveillance usually targets physicians,
    laboratories, and infection control officers
  • Referred to as passive because no action is taken
    unless completed reports are received by the
    public health agency and further public health
    action is deemed desirable
  • Completeness of reporting is usually lowest for
    passive systems, but they tend to be the least
    expensive to maintain

9
TYPES OF SURVEILLANCE (contd.)
  • Active Surveillance
  • Active surveillance involves an ongoing search
    for cases
  • This may involve regular contacts with key
    reporting sources, such as telephone calls to
    physicians or laboratories, or a frequent review
    of data that may include cases of a specific
    condition, such as a review of laboratory logs
    for certain bacterial isolates or a review of
    admissions to burn units to identify severely
    burned individual
  • Active surveillance systems may have high levels
    of completeness but are usually much more
    expensive to maintain some question the
    cost-effectiveness of active surveillance

10
TYPES OF SURVEILLANCE (contd.)
  • Sentinel Surveillance
  • Sentinel surveillance involves the use of a
    sample of providers -- most generally, a sample
    of physicians or emergency rooms -- to identify
    trends in diseases that occur at relatively high
    frequencies
  • E.g., sentinel surveillance systems, such as
    those for influenza, provide timely information
    about trends in influenza-like illness activitiy,
    and are useful for obtaining information about
    strains that may be circulating in a community --
    assuming that there is a laboratory-based
    component to the surveillance

11
TYPES OF SURVEILLANCE (contd.)
  • Special Surveillance System
  • Special surveillance systems have been found
    useful for certain types of surveillance
    activities
  • The Behavior Risk Factor Surveillance System
    (BRFSS) involves administering a questionnaire to
    a random sample of individuals on a ongoing basis
    to identify trends in behavior that affect health
    risk -- e.g., monitoring the impact of such
    activities as breast cancer screening with
    mammography, cervical cancer with pap smears, use
    of smoke alarms in houses, as well as other
    health-related behaviors and practices
  • Mocrobiologic surveys have been useful in
    determining the antibioltic resistance among
    persons with invasive pneumococcal infections

12
THE BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTORSURVILLANCE SYSTEM
(BRFSS)
  • In 1981, the CDC began helping states and
    communities to survey adults, 19 years and older,
    by telephone about their health behaviors
  • In 1984, the CDC initiated the BRFSS to enable
    states to collect state-specific behavioral risk
    factor data
  • Data are used to estimate the prevalence of
    behaviors related to the leading causes of death
    and disability, and are available by such control
    variables as age, race, sex, income, and education

13
THE BEHAVIORAL RISK FACTORSURVILLANCE SYSTEM
(BRFSS)
  • By 1994, all 50 states and D.C. were
    participating in the BRFSS -- a telephone survey
    using random-digit dialing and a probability
    sample of U.S. householdsl
  • The BRFSS survey instrument consists of
  • Core questions asked in all states -- dealing
    primarily with recent or current behaviors that
    are risk factors for disease or injury and with
    quality of life indicators
  • Standard modules -- sets of questions developed
    by the CDC on specific topics suggested by states
    -- each state decides every year which, if any,
    standard modules they will include
  • State-specific questions -- included only in a
    particular states survey coverage
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