Disease Surveillance and Monitoring Systems
Syndromic surveillance: An alert is issued when ...
Case counts reach threshold
Surveillance: proving a disease is present
Case finding Measure level of disease
Passive surveillance systems used to monitor biological agents
Case-based (animals and people) Syndromic (people, sometimes animals)
Surveillance: systematic ___, ___, and interpretation of data and the ___ of information to those who need to know in order to ___
Collection Analysis Dissemination Take action
Why is surveillance important?
Control and/or prevent disease -any data collected must be organized and carefully examined -any results need to be communicated to stakeholders
Types of sampling: non probability sampling
Convenience sampling
Reasons to sample populations
Describe the characteristics of a population Test specific hypotheses
Sampling steps
1. Define objectives 2. ID target population 3. Determine required precision 4. Decide sampling units 5. Develop sampling frame
Monitoring is surveillance without ...
A threshold
PASSIVE//ACTIVE surveillance systems may have high levels of completeness but are usually much more expensive to maintain
Active
Surveillance often targets ___ for which a rapid, direct, predetermined action is warrented
Agents/diseases *maximize early detection and minimize false-positives
Passive surveillance utilizes samples or observations collected primarily for ...
Another purpose
For early detection, the surveillance system should ...
Be continuous Have comprehensive coverage of the population Be sensitive w/a very low design prevalence
Example of syndromic surveillance
BioSense program (CDC): syndromes created for BT-related and non-related infectious agents -compares baselines (expected) to observed count of visits for the current day
Active surveillance systems used to monitor for biological agents
Biosensor (environment) Pathogen screening (animals, sometimes people)
Surveillance to "measure disease" DOES//DOESN'T need to be continuous, should be based on ____ sampling to avoid bias, and should use a big enough sample size to give ____
Doesn't (can be ad how or periodic) Representative sampling Adequate precision
Surveillance to demonstrate freedom from disease DOES//DOESN'T need to be continuous and can use ____ sampling to increase efficiency as well as uses a LOWER//HIGHER design prevalence than early detection
Doesn't (instead may be ad hod or intermittent) Risk-based Higher
Surveillance: proving a disease is absent
Early detection Demonstrate freedom
Biosensors monitor samples from the ___ with a timeliness of ____ hours after an agent is released; representativeness, sensitivity
Environment 12-36 hours Representativeness: discrete locations only Sensitivity: does not confirm human exposure
"Representative" representativeness: prevalence in a population is EQUAL//LESS THAN//NOT EQUAL to the prevalence in the sample
Equal
Sampling: deciding sampling units
Group (herd), individual, udder quarter, etc.
Passive surveillance is reliant upon ... to report cases of disease, and the primary advantage is ____, but a disadvantage is the possibility of ...
Health care providers or laboratories Efficiency Incomplete date due to underreporting
Main resources required for surveillance
Human Financial Transport and communication Laboratory
Objective of "early detection"
Identify disease rapidly before significant spread
Screening: testing to identify individual with ... ; objective is either ...
Infection of disease Personal intervention Protection of the public *Measurement of prevalence in screened populations
"Risk-based" representativeness: prevalence in a population is EQUAL//LESS THAN//NOT EQUAL to the prevalence in the sample
Less than
Sampling: developing sampling frame
List of sampling units from which sample will be drawn
Active animal-based surveillance: disease/processing status
Live/heathy animals -random sampling -sentinels Specific clinical signs Slaughter
Surveillance: data collection to measure ___, ___, and ___ in populations; the objective is ...
Magnitude Changes Trends Intervention in defined populations
Uses of surveillance information
Monitoring disease trends Describing natural hx of diseases ID epidemics or new syndromes Monitoring changes in infectious agents ID areas of research Planning health policy Evaluating interventions
Types of sampling
Non-probability sampling Probability sampling
"Biased" representativeness: prevalence in a population is EQUAL//LESS THAN//NOT EQUAL TO the prevalence in the sample
Not equal to
Active surveillance involves an ONGOING//REGULAR//AD HOC search for cases and is needed for EASILY DETECTED//HARD TO DETECT diseases
Ongoing Hard to detect
Timeliness of surveillance: "categories"
Ongoing Regular Ad hoc
The majority of government surveillance systems are PASSIVE//ACTIVE
Passive
Major types of surveillance
Passive Active
Objective of "demonstration of freedom"
Provide proof of no disease
Effectiveness of surveillance is dependent upon ...
Quality Amount Distribution
Syndromic surveillance has high SENSITIVITY//SPECIFICITY and low SENSITIVITY//SPECIFICITY
Sensitivity Specificity *less severe cases may not be identified
Why should human and animal surveillance be integrated?
Shared environmental concerns Shared risk and exposure with zoonotic diseases
Syndromic surveillance: monitor ____ indicative of a disease or disorder and often uses _____ data; timeliness, representativeness
Signs/symptoms Electronic healthcare encounter data Timeliness: near "real time" Representativeness: entities willing/able to participate
"____ sample" selects a fixed percentage of the sampling frame using a formal random process, and a known probability that an individual sampling unit will be selected from the sampling frame
Simple random sample
Types of sampling: probability sampling
Simple random sampling Systematic random sampling Stratified random sampling Cluster sampling Multistage sampling
Attributes of surveillance systems
Simplicity Flexibility Data quality Sensitivity Cost Representativeness Predictive positive value
Sampling is the procedure by which ...
Some members (a subset) of a given population are selected and measured as representatives of the entire population or herd
Active animal-based surveillance is used for these specific disease programs
Srapie Bovine tuberculosis Chronic wasting disease Avian influenza
Animal health surveillance agencies in the US
State departments of agriculture USDA APHIS NAHLN
Human health surveillance agencies in the US
State/regional public health CDC FDA
Sampling: determining the required precision is dependent upon ...
Surveillance objectives
Three principles to meet surveillance objectives
Timeliness Population coverage Representativeness
Case-based surveillance: timeliness, representativeness, and sensitivity
Timeliness of reporting: days to weeks Representativeness: required ind all states Sensitivity: predetermined case definitions *list of disease/pathogens reportable to overseeing authority (varies by state)
Objective of "measuring disease"
To detect changes in the level of disease
Objective of "case finding"
To identify infected animals, flocks, or herds during a control program
Active surveillance utilizes samples or observations collected specifically for ...
Use by the surveillance program
"Case finding" surveillance should ...
Use comprehensive coverage of the population Be ongoing Have good individual herd or animal sensitivity