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Lecture 9 : Surveillance

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Title: Lecture 9 : Surveillance


1

Epidemiology
  • Lecture 9 Surveillance

2
Learning outcomes
  • Describe the use of surveillance in monitoring
    the health of the community
  • Define the keys elements of a health surveillance
    system
  • Interpret surveillance data
  • Describe key data sources for health surveillance

3
Public Health Approach
Implementation How do you do it?
Intervention Evaluation What works?
Problem
Response
CDC, 2001
4
Surveillance
  • is the continuous and systematic collection,
    analysis, interpretation and dissemination of
    descriptive information for monitoring health
    problems
  • asks the question What is the problem?

5
Surveillance systems
  • Include networks of people and activities that
    maintain the surveillance process
  • May function at a range of levels, from local to
    international

6
Objectives of Surveillance
  • Describe the epidemiology of health problems and
    issues
  • Monitor the occurrence of disease/ health event
    indicators over time within specific populations
  • Links to planning and provision of services
  • Education and policy
  • Evaluation of interventions (control and
    prevention)
  • Project changes
  • Detect outbreaks/ epidemics
  • Stimulate research

7
Elements of a Surveillance System
  • Case definition e.g. WHO
  • Population under surveillance
  • Cycle of Surveillance
  • Confidentiality
  • De-identified core unit data are supplied
    fortnightly for collation, analysis and
    dissemination
  • Anonymous
  • Coded
  • Incentives to participation

8
Example Hepatitis A Case Definition
  • Notifications
  • a) Detection of anti-hepatitis A virus IgM
    antibody, in the absence of recent vaccination
  • or
  • b) A clinical case of hepatitis (jaundice
    elevated aminotransferase levels, without a
    non-infectious cause) and an epidemiological link
    to a serologically confi rmed case.
  • Hospitalisations and deaths
  • The ICD10AM/ICD10 codes B15 (hepatitis A) were
    used to identify hospitalisations and deaths

9
Cycle of Surveillance
Collect
Analyse
Link to practice
Interpret
Disseminate
10
Information Loop of Public Health Surveillance
Analysis
11
Approaches to surveillance
  • Notifiable disease reporting
  • Laboratory-based reporting
  • Sentinel surveillance and surveys
  • Special surveillance networks Volunteer
    providers
  • Active and passive surveillance
  • Disease Registries
  • Birth, Death Registers
  • Information systems (Administrative data)
  • Environmental monitoring
  • Record linkages

12
  • Record linkage brings together information from
    two independent source records believed to relate
    to the same individual or family and is critical
    for creating an information-rich environment.

13
Approaches to surveillance
  • Notifiable disease reporting
  • Collation of reports about a disease that must
    be reported to the authorities by law or
    ministerial decree.

14
NNDSS
  • The National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance
    System (NNDSS) was established in 1990 under the
    auspices of the Communicable Diseases Network
    Australia (CDNA).
  • The System co-ordinates the national surveillance
    of more than 50 communicable diseases or disease
    groups.
  • Computerised, de-identified unit records of
    notifications are supplied to the Department of
    Health and Ageing for collation, analysis and
    publication on the
  • Internet and
  • quarterly journal Communicable Diseases
    Intelligence.

15
  • Notification data provided include
  • a unique record reference number
  • state or territory identifier
  • disease code
  • date of onset
  • date of notification to the relevant health
    authority
  • sex
  • age
  • Indigenous status
  • postcode of residence

16
  • The quality and completeness of data compiled in
    the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance
    System are influenced by various factors.
  • Notifications may be required from treating
    clinicians, diagnostic laboratories or hospitals.
  • In addition, the mechanism of notification varies
    between States and Territories and in some cases
    different diseases are notifiable by different
    mechanisms.
  • The proportion of cases seen by health care
    providers which are the subject of notification
    to health authorities is not known with certainty
    for any disease, and may vary among diseases,
    between jurisdictions and over time.

17
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18
Approaches to surveillance
  • Laboratory-based reporting The starting point is
    the identification or isolation of a particular
    organism in a laboratory. For example
    surveillance of Salmonellosis
  • For example HIV/AIDS
  • National surveillance for HIV disease is
    coordinated by NCHECR, in collaboration with
    State and Territory health authorities and the
    Commonwealth of Australia.
  • Cases of HIV infection are notified to the
    National HIV Database on the first occasion of
    diagnosis in Australia, by
  • either the diagnosing laboratory (ACT, New South
    Wales, Tasmania, Victoria) or
  • by a combination of laboratory and doctor sources
    (Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia,
    Western Australia)

19
Sentinel surveillance and surveys
  • The surveillance of a specified health event in a
    sample of the population at risk. The sample
    should be representative of the total population
    at risk.
  • Monitoring of key health events through sentinel
  • Sites
  • Events
  • Providers
  • Vectors/animals

20
  • Sentinel Sites
  • Sentinel Sites might be medical clinics,
    hospitals, health centres which cover certain
    populations at risk.
  • They could be networks of individual
    practitioners such as primary health care
    physicians.
  • Such sentinels can often provide an early
    assessment of occurrence in an outbreak and are
    most useful for diseases that occur frequently.
  • Sentinel Providers
  • Physician sentinels are often used for
    surveillance of influenza.
  • However, in some instances, physician networks
    can be used to detect rare events such as acute
    flaccid paralysis.

21
  • Sentinel Events
  • Sentinel events are measured occurrences that can
    be used to bring attention to problems in
    practices, procedures or systems.
  • For example, maternal mortality has long been
    used as one indicator of the efficacy of maternal
    and child health programmes.
  • Sentinel vectors/animals
  • For example sentinel chicken surveillance
    program for West Nile virus infection
  • Sentinel surveillance is a means to provide
    information for mosquito control to be more
    effective

22
  • Sentinel general practitioner surveillance
    schemes for influenza monitor the consultation
    rates for influenza-like illness (ILI).
  • In Australia, there are 5 such schemes
  • the Australian Sentinel Practice Research Network
    (ASPREN) which collects data at a national level
  • the New South Wales Influenza Surveillance
    Scheme,
  • the Victorian Influenza Surveillance Scheme,
  • Western Australian sentinel general practices
  • the Northern Territory Tropical Influenza
    Surveillance Scheme.
  • ASPREN and the Northern Territory Tropical
    Influenza Surveillance Scheme report ILI rates
    throughout the year,
  • while the other sentinel surveillance schemes
    report from May to October each year.

23
  • In 2003, an average of 47 (range 3262) general
    practices reported ILI cases on an average of
    4,962 (range 2,1386,587) consultation per week.

24
Sentinel surveillance and surveys
25
Approaches to surveillance
  • Special surveillance networks
  • Set up to monitor specific health events often
    for short term specific purpose
  • eg
  • World Cup
  • Hospital Infection Surveillance system

26
Approaches to surveillance
  • Active surveillance
  • The dynamic seeking of data from participants in
    the surveillance system on a regular basis. It is
    labour intensive, costly and seldom done e.g.
    personal visits, telephone calls to obtain
    required data
  • Health department initiated
  • Passive surveillance
  • Surveillance where reports are awaited and no
    attempt made to actively seek reports from the
    participants in the system. Most common form of
    surveillance. Mandatory
  • Provider initiated

27
Approaches to surveillance
  • Disease Register
  • is a list of patients with a given condition.
  • eg Diabetes, Cancer
  • Birth, Death Registers
  • Information systems (Administrative data)
  • Environmental monitoring
  • Record linkages

28
Attributes of surveillance systems
  • Sensitivitydoes the SS identify all events in a
    target pop?
  • Timeliness the length of time it takes to
    complete the entire information cycle
  • Representativeness does the SS represent all the
    cases in the target pop? (only identifying
    extreme cases rather then all cases)
  • Predictive value are the reported cases really
    cases?

29
Attributes of surveillance systems ctd.
  • Accuracy and completeness of descriptive
    information is the information reliable and
    descriptive in terms of potential exposure and
    high risk situations?
  • Simplicity is the method of data collection
    unobtrusive, user friendly, easy to complete
    (forms)?
  • Flexibility can the SS adapt to monitoring new
    standards of disease/information?
  • Acceptability is the SS accepted by the
    participants?

30
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Portray the natural history of a disease
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in infectious agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

31
Asthma in Australia 2003
  • http//www.asthmamonitoring.org/

32
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

33
Estimated prevalence of National Health Priority
Area diseases/conditions, all ages, Australia,
2001
Source ABS National Health Survey 2001.
34
Trends in the prevalence of asthma,adults,
Australia, 19902001
Sources Comino et al. 1996 Taylor et al. 1998
Wilson et al. 2002, 2003 Woods et al. 2001.
35
Prevalence of current asthma, by age group and
sex, Australia, 2001
Source ABS National Health Survey 2001.
36
Death rates for asthma,all ages and age 534
years, by sex,Australia, 19792001
Source AIHW National Mortality Database.
37
Children with and without current asthma with one
or more cigarette smokers in the household, by
age group and sex, Australia, 2001
Source ABS National Health Survey 2001.
38
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

39
Asthma Mortality Rates, by health service area,
United States,1995-97
National, Heart, Lung Blood Institute.
40
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

41
Asthma-related health care encounters, per
100,000 population, Australia and New South
Wales, 19982002
Sources BEACH Survey of General Practice AIHW
National Hospital Morbidity Database NSW Health
Department Emergency Department Collection (EDDC)
(HOIST) Centre for Epidemiology and Research, NSW
Department of Health.
42
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

43
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

44
Number of structured general practice asthma
review visits, all ages and age 5 to 34 years,
Australia, Oct 2001 - June 2003
Source MBS statistics.
45
Claims for the performance of spirometry and
complex lung function tests which included
spirometry, all ages, Australia, 19942002
Source HIC health statistics.
46
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

47
Children with and without current asthmawith one
or more cigarette smokers in the household, by
SEIFA quintile, age 0 to 14 years, Australia, 2001
Source ABS National Health Survey 2001.
48
Pollen Map, US
Source Allergy Health Centre
49
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning

50
Changes over time in the proportion of people
with asthma who report possession of a (written)
asthma action plan, Australia, 19902001
Sources Comino et al. 1996 Gibson et al. 2000,
Public Health Division 2001 Wilson et al. 2002,
2003.
51
Proportion of people with current asthma with a
written asthma action plan, by age group and sex,
Australia, 2001
Source ABS National Health Survey 2001.
52
Emergency Department presentations for asthma per
100,000 population, by month and age group, New
South Wales, January 1998 to March 2003
ED presentations for asthma per 100,000 population
Source NSW Health Department Emergency
Department Data Collection (HOIST), Centre for
Epidemiology and Research, NSW Department of
Health.
53
Hospital separations for asthma,per 100,000
population, Australia, 19932001
Source AIHW National Hospital Morbidity Database.
54
Uses of Public Health Surveillance
  • Estimate magnitude of the problem
  • Determine geographic distribution of illness
  • Detect epidemics/define a problem
  • Generate hypotheses, stimulate research
  • Evaluate control measures
  • Monitor changes in risk factors or causal agents
  • Detect changes in health practices
  • Facilitate planning
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