Control of infection in the community - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 62
About This Presentation
Title:

Control of infection in the community

Description:

Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: darinaoflanagan Last modified by: darinaoflanagan Created Date: 10/12/2002 10:10:04 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:319
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 63
Provided by: darinaof
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Control of infection in the community


1
Control of infection in the community
Darina OFlanagan Director Health Protection
Surveillance Centre
2
Learning objectives
  • Importance of Surveillance/ Epidemic Intelligence
  • New International Health Regulations
  • Clusters of unusual diseases
  • Iceberg concept
  • Importance of reporting culture
  • Primary prevention of infection in the community
    Vaccination
  • Secondary Prevention
  • Chemoprophylaxis
  • Haemophilus influenzae meningitis
  • Invasive Meningococcal disease, Invasive Group A
    Strep, TB
  • Outbreak Management in the Community
  • Foodborne Outbreaks done with Dr McNamara
  • Legionnaires Disease
  • Responding to Emerging Diseases Pandemic
    Influenza

3
Definition of public health surveillance
  • The ongoing systematic collection and analysis
    of data and the provision of information which
    leads to action being taken to prevent and
    control a disease, usually one of an infectious
    nature.

4
Risk Assessment vs. Risk Management
Monitor information
Risk monitoring
Assess signal
Risk assessment
Investigate PH alert
Implement control measures
Risk management
Disseminate information
Risk communication
5
Epidemic Intelligence Framework Important for new
International Health Regulations
Event-based component
Indicator-based component
Event monitoring
Surveillance systems
Report
Data
CaptureFilterVerify
CollectAnalyseInterpret
Signal
EWRS Rapid inquiries E-Alerts IHR Epi bulletin WEB
Assess
Disseminate
Public health Alert
Investigate
Control measures
6
Epidemic IntelligenceDefinition
  • Epidemic intelligence is the process to
    detect, verify, analyze, assess and investigate
    signals that may represent a threat to public
    health. It encompasses all activities related to
    early warning surveillance functions but also
    signal assessments and outbreak investigation.

7
Indicator-based EI componentHealthcare settings
  • Identified risks
  • Mandatory notification
  • Laboratory surveillance
  • Emerging risks
  • Syndromic surveillance
  • Mortality monitoring
  • Health care activity monitoring
  • Prescription monitoring
  • Poison centres

8
Risk monitoringEvent-based surveillance
  • Domestic
  • Media monitoring
  • EI focal points
  • International
  • Information scanning tools (GPhin, MedISys)
  • Distribution lists/Networks
  • PROMED
  • WHO-OVL
  • International agencies

9
Event-based surveillanceInfo scanning tools -
GPhin
10
(No Transcript)
11
Outbreak detection
  • May 2000 Scotland
  • Severe soft tissue abscesses systemic illness and
    death in IDU
  • EU rapid alert issued
  • Surveillance set up in A E
  • Irish outbreak identified
  • 22 cases, 8 deaths
  • Clostridium novyii identifed
  • New methadone clinics offered
  • Messages to IDU not to muscle pop
  • Attend early if any abscess

12
(No Transcript)
13
Surveillance you see what you look at
Laboratory-based surveillance
Report
Pos. specimen
Clinical specimen
Clinically-based surveillance
Seek medical attention
Disease
Community-based surveillance
Infected
Serological survey
Exposed
14
Acute Gastroenteritis SurveyNorth and South
  • Frequency of IID 4.5 per 4 week period
  • 9000 new episodes per day
  • 3.2M episodes per year
  • Days of illness 12.6M per year
  • GP Consultations 3000 per day (7.5 lab spec
    - 2 ill)
  • 1.1M per year
  • Working Days lost 1.5M per year
  • Loss of Earnings 173M per year

Source FSPB. Acute Gastroenteritis in Ireland,
North and South, FSPB, Dublin 2003
15
Invasive Meningococcal Disease(IMD)A highly
succesful example of primary prevention of
infectious disease in the community
16
IMD in Ireland 1999- 2004Monthly number of cases
Oct 2000 Men C vaccine
17
Invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)
diseaseAn example of surveillance data being
used to influence the childhood immunisation
schedule
18
Quarterly immunisation uptake rates at 24 months
in Ireland
19
Invasive Hib in Ireland 1987- 2005
20
Summary Hib in Ireland
  • In 2005
  • Incidence of invasive Hib disease increased in lt5
    yr olds
  • Majority of Hib cases in lt15 yr olds occurred in
    vaccinated children 93
  • Number of true vaccine failures increased
    dramatically in 2005
  • 14 TVFs in 2005, 6 in 2004 (4/6 occurring in Q4)
    and 3 in 2003
  • A selection of Hib vaccines associated with these
    failures
  • 12/14 TVFs in 2005 occurred in children aged 13
    months 4 years
  • Response to these trends
  • National Immunisation Advisory Committee
    recommended that a catch up Hib dose be offered
    to children lt4 years of age, in order to further
    protect this age group from Hib disease.
  • The catch up campaign was launched by HSE on 21
    November 2005
  • HPSC continuing to closely monitor the situation
    through surveillance

21
Chemoprophylaxis
22
Chemoprophylaxis- Meningococcal
  • Aim
  • Eliminate carriage from network of close
    contacts
  • Prevent further cases among susceptible close
    contacts
  • Saliva inhibitory to meningococcal growth
  • Secondary cases are rare
  • less than 3 of all cases are considered
    secondary cases.
  • Risk of disease is highest amongst household
    contacts
  • Highest risk in the 1st week, and falls over
    next 2-3 months. With chemoprophylaxis this is
    extended up to 6 months Attack rate x 500-1000
    1 households in 1st month (1 in 300 secondary
    contacts)
  • Secondary cases in crèches etc v. rare, 4 cases
    over 3 years in population 56 million. (1 in 1500
    for crèche, 1 in 1800 for primary school and 1 in
    33000 for secondary school. A randomised control
    trial is impossible.)

23
Chemoprophylaxis-Meningococcal
  • For index patient
  • as soon as can tolerate oral medication (unless
    treated with ceftriaxone if cefotaxime still
    need chemo)
  • For close contacts
  • If contact within 7 days prior to the onset
    (incubation 3-5 days) Eligible close contacts
    are
  • household contact shared living/sleeping
    accommodation includes baby minders
  • mouth kissing contact (usually close contact)
  • Gave mouth to mouth resuscitation (1 in 100,000,
    wear masks!)
  • in same nursery/crèche where nature/duration of
    contact is similar to to that for household
    contacts

24
Chemoprophylaxis- School setting (1)
  • School contacts
  • Prophylaxis not indicated for sporadic cases, but
    give advice
  • If 2 or more cases in the same class in the same
    term give to class members and teachers

25
Chemoprophylaxis- School setting (2)
  • in different classes management depends on
    factors such as
  • interval between cases, size of the contact
    group, carriage rate in the school, whether due
    to vaccine preventable strain,
  • incidence of the disease in the community ?
    community outbreak
  • the degree of public concern

26
Chemoprophylaxis
  • Not recommended routinely on public transport
    e.g. bus and train
  • Special consideration to party esp with
    pre-school children present - if decide to give
    give to all adults and children
  • Special consideration to members of extended
    family where overcrowding or adverse living
    conditions
  • Simultaneous administration is ideal but if
    someone missed then give up to within a month

27
Chemoprophylaxis used
  • Rifampicin
  • Frequently used, oral (two days)
  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Becoming more frequently used (one dose)
  • Ceftriaxone
  • Often used for pregnant contacts
  • IM injection

28
Chemoprophylaxis - Hib disease
  • Rifampicin recommended for 4 days
  • 4 days needed to eradicate carriage (more days
    than for meningo) 20mg/kg/day (up to a max of
    600mg daily) once daily for four days
  • Recent recommendations from UK recommend
    rifampicin to all household members if at risk
    individuals in household (regardless of
    immunisation status) i.e.
  • Children lt 4 years in household
  • Immunocompromised individual
  • In crèche or playgroup
  • Two or more cases in 120 day period, offer to all
    room contacts (children and adults)

29
Invasive Group A Strep iGAS
  • Most GAS infections mild such as strep throat or
    impetigo. Rare occasions can become invasive e.g.
    necrotising fasciitis or Streptococcal toxic
    shock syndrome
  • Close contacts should receive chemo (oral
    penicillin) if symptoms suggestive of localised
    GAS infection
  • Mother and baby if either develops iGAS in the
    neonatal period
  • Other contacts should be given leaflet and warned
    to look out for symptoms for 30 days after
    diagnosis in the index case see leaflet on
    www.hpsc.ie

30
TB
31
TB notification rates per 100,000 population,
Europe, 2003
32
National Notifications of Tuberculosis 1952 -
2003
BCG introduced early 50s
Source DoHC 1952-1997, HPSC 1998-2003
33
What do we want to do? Stop people getting TB
  • How?
  • Find people with infectious TB as soon as
    possible and treat them
  • Find their contacts and examine them to ensure
    that they have
  • Not got TB
  • Are not developing TB (TB infection / latent TB)
  • Find people who have a high risk of having latent
    TB, test them and if positive for TB, treat them
    with chemoprophylaxis (new entrant screening)
  • BCG

34
Incidence rate per million population of
legionnaires disease in various European
countries, 2004
35
Incidence of Legionnaires Disease
  • Less than 5 of cases are notified through
    passive surveillance (Marston,1997)
  • Legionella causes 2 to 16 of community acquired
    pneumonia cases in industrialised countries
    (Bohte,1995)
  • Legionella causes 14 to 37 of severe cases of
    community acquired pneumonia, with associated
    mortality in excess of 25 (Hubbard,1993)

36
Case Legionnaires in Ireland1999-2004
  • Of 30 cases notified in this time period
  • 11 were community acquired (36.8)
  • 2 was nosocomial (6.6) (Laboratory confirmed
    case that occurs in a patient who was in hospital
    for all 10 days before onset of symptoms.)
  • 17 were travel acquired (56.6) (A case who in
    the ten days before onset of illness stayed
    at/visited an accommodation site reported to
    EWGLI)
  • Countries acquired included France, Ireland,
    Italy, Malta, Mexico, Portugal, Spain, Tunisia
    and USA.
  • Malefemale ratio is 2.21
  • Age Range between 19-80 years and median age is
    53 years

37
Diagnosis and follow up
  • Notify MOH
  • Check 14 day diary
  • Notify EHO who will sample water at hotels /-
    domestic houses

38
(No Transcript)
39
SARS in Ireland
40
Influenza report available weekly at www.hpsc.ie
ILI rate per 100,000 population and the number of
positive influenza specimens detected by the NVRL
during the 2000/2001, 2001/2002, 2002/2003,
2003/2004 2004/2005 seasons, summer 2005 and
the 2005/2006 season.
41
Why is there concern about avian influenza A/H5N1?
  • H5N1 has causes the largest outbreak in birds on
    record, since late 2003
  • Despite culling gt150 million birds, its become
    endemic in parts of SE Asia

42
Why is there concern about avian influenza A/H5N1?
  • May mutate and start the next pandemic
  • Domestic ducks can excrete large quantities of
    H5N1without signs of illness - silent reservoirs
  • H5N1 viruses now more lethal to experimentally
    infected mice and to ferrets (a mammalian model)
  • H5N1 has expanded its host range.
  • The behaviour of the virus in its natural
    reservoir, wild waterfowl, may be changing.
  • Spring 2005 die-off of circa 6,000 migratory
    birds at a nature reserve in central China, due
    to H5N1, was highly unusual and probably
    unprecedented.

43
Why is there concern about avian influenza A/H5N1?
  • When humans become ill with AI
  • unusually aggressive clinical course with severe
    disseminated disease affecting multiple organs
    and systems
  • Rapid deterioration
  • High fatality
  • It causes death in gt50 of those affected
  • Most cases have occurred in previously healthy
    children and young adults

44
(No Transcript)
45
Controlling Spread?
46
Guidance re avian influenza at Phase 3
  • Clinical assessment of people with ARI coming
    from country affected by H5N1
  • Algorithm/guidelines for assessment
  • Travel advice
  • No travel restrictions
  • Avoid wet markets, contact with poultry
  • If ill on return contact GP
  • General public concerns
  • Seasonal flu vaccine for poultry workers
  • If an outbreak of AI occurred in birds, exposed
    workers might be under public health surveillance
    and given oseltamivir prophylactically
  • Details available at www.hpsc.ie/A-Z/Respiratory/
    AvianInfluenza/

47
Lessons from past pandemics 
  • Occur unpredictably, not always in winter
  • Great variations in mortality, severity of
    illness and pattern of illness or age most
    severely affected
  • Rapid surge in number of cases over brief period
    of time, often measured in weeks
  • Tend to occur in waves - subsequent waves may be
    more or less severe
  •     Key lesson unpredictability 
  • Will also depend on the availability and
    effectiveness of antiviral drugs and vaccines

48
Emergence of pandemic virus 3 requirements
  • Novel virus subtype emerges, with little or no
    immunity in humans
  • Virus can replicate in humans and cause serious
    illness
  • Can be transmitted efficiently from
    person-to-person

49
WHO alert phases
50
Four EU alert levels
  • Alert level
  • 0 No cases anywhere in the world
  • 1 Cases only outside the EU
  • New virus isolated in the EU
  • Outbreak(s) in the EU
  • 4 Widespread activity across the EU

51
Expected scale and severity
Expected excess deaths Expected excess hospitalisations
Global 2-50 million 6.4-28.1 million
Ireland 1- 5,000 3-14,000
UK Minimum of 50,000 Minimum of 80,000
52
Epidemic progression in Ireland
  • Weighted sum of deaths over time from previous
    pandemics (1918, 1957, 1968) based on HPA UK
    planning model, Oct 2005

53
Hospitalisations per week
Latent 2 days Infectious 4 days
54
Effect of antivirals on hospitalisations per
week, Ro1.39
Latent 2 days Infectious 4 days
55
Effect of antivirals on hospitalisations per
week, Ro1.8
Latent 2 days Infectious 4 days
56
Key components of pandemic flu preparedness and
response
  • Surveillance and early diagnosis
  • Antiviral drugs
  • Vaccines (once they become available)
  • Public health interventions
  • Health system response and government response
  • Communications

57
Public health interventions
  • Personal interventions
  • Basic measures to reduce the spread of infection
  • Hand washing prevents acquiring the virus from
    contact with infected surfaces and from passing
    it on
  • Respiratory hygiene covering the mouth and nose
    when coughing or sneezing
  • Avoiding crowds (where feasible) non attendance
    at large gatherings such as concerts, theatres,
    cinemas, sports arenas etc. nb STAY AT HOME IF
    YOU ARE SICK

58
Possible population-wide interventions
  • Travel restrictions
  • Restrictions of mass public gatherings
  • Schools closure
  • Voluntary home isolation of cases
  • Voluntary quarantine of contacts of known cases

59
Antivirals
  • Government has ordered stockpile sufficient to
    treat 25 of the population (including HCWs)
  • Rationale
  • 50 infection rate
  • 50 of cases asymptomatic 25 clinical attack
    rate
  • Enough to treat all who require it
  • Plan is to treat, not to give prophylaxis
  • Could lead to 50-77 reductions in
    hospitalisations and LRTI requiring
    hospitalization (Gani 2005)
  • Initial shipment of 600,000 doses delivered.
    Balance due 2006.
  • Logistics of rapid delivery being examined

60
Vaccines 
  • Routine seasonal flu vaccines will provide little
    or no protection
  • The new virus strain has to be identified, and
    new vaccine must be developed to match the
    pandemic strain of virus
  • Four to six months to produce, possibly longer
  • Unlikely to be available during the early stages
  • When available, aim to immunise whole population
    as soon as possible 2 dose schedule probable
  • As production will take time, vaccines will be
    given to some groups before others according to
    nationally agreed priorities

61
Vaccines
  • Pandemic vaccine priority groups
  • Providers of essential services (fire, utilities,
    etc)
  • HC staff with patient contact
  • High medical risk e.g. CHD, RF, DM, pregnant
    women (3rd trimester), children 6 months- 23
    months
  • gt65 yrs
  • Selected industries maintenance of essential
    supplies
  • All age groups
  • H5N1 vaccine
  • Not matched to pandemic strain
  • May provide some protection pending development
    of pandemic vaccine
  • Enough to vaccinate 200,000 HCWs and essential
    staff

62
Summary
  • Opportunities for intervention depend on good
    surveillance data
  • Unusual clusters are notifiable let us know!
  • Guidance for control in new and emerging diseases
    evolve on practically a weekly basis check the
    web site www.hpsc.ie for latest updates
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com