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SURVEILLANCE
METHODS
Presented by-Anchal
M.Pharm
(Pharmacology)
Surveillance
• For persons who need to carry out surveillance activities
but have little prior experience or training
• Also helpful for people who would like to better
understand the process and reasoning behind
surveillance methods and interpretation
SURVEILLANCE
• Surveillance is data collection for action.
• The mere collection and compilation of disease-
related data without analysing them and taking
appropriate action is not surveillance.
• Disease surveillance is the systematic collection, analysis
and dissemination of data on diseases of public health
importance so that appropriate action can be taken to
either prevent or stop further spread of disease.
• It guides disease control activities and measures the
impact of immunization services.
What Is Surveillance?
• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):
surveillance is “ongoing systematic collection, analysis,
and interpretation of health data essential to the
planning, implementation, and evaluation of public
health practice, closely integrated with the timely
dissemination of these data to those who need to know.”
Examples of surveillance
• Communicable diseases
• Health behaviors:
• Drug use, risky sexual behavior
• Risk factors for chronic diseases (e.g. smoking)
• Environmental risks and diseases
• Health care
WHY IS DISEASE SURVEILLANCCE
NECESSARY ?
Disease surveillance is used to
• predict or detect disease outbreaks with a view to
investigation and containment
• Identify high risk population and areas requiring special
attention.
• Monitor impact and progress towards disease eradication ,
elimination and control
• identify areas in which system performance is poor, so that
corrective measures can be taken
• monitor programme effectiveness by documenting short- and
long-term effects of immunization on disease burden .
• identify circulating strains including serotype , genotypes and
subtypes .
• Determine the frequency of occurrence of a disease in a
community and the burden of disease .
IMPORTANCE
• Collecting data is merely one step
• Critical goal is to control and/or prevent diseases
• Any data collected must be organized and carefully
examined
• Any results need to be communicated to public health
and medical communities
• Vital to communicate results
• During potential outbreak so public health and medical
communities can help with disease prevention and control
efforts
• During non-outbreak times to provide information about
baseline levels of disease
• Baseline provides information to public health officials monitoring health at
community level, serves as reference in future outbreaks
SURVEILLANC METHODS
• Classified as
passive
active
• Passive surveillance-Regular reporting of disease data by
all institutions that see patients (or test specimens) and
are part of a reporting network.
• There is no active search for cases.
• It involves passive notification by surveillance sites and
reports are generated and sent by local staff.
• relies on the cooperation of health-care providers —
laboratories, hospitals, health facilities and private practitioners
— to report.
• Once the data have been received, they must be compiled and
then analysed to monitor disease patterns and identify possible
outbreaks.
• Involves the regular collection and reporting of surveillance
data and is the commonest method.
• Less expensive than other surveillance strategies and covers
wide areas (whole countries or provinces)
• However, because it relies on an extensive network of health
workers, it can be difficult to ensure completeness and
timeliness of data
• In Some countries might not have the capacity or resources to
identify all cases a disease, either because the diagnosis of the
disease requires specialized clinical skills or because laboratory
resources are not available throughout the country.
• Under these circumstances, passive surveillance can be
adapted in a number of ways, depending on the completeness
and quality of data required, financial constraints and the
availability of specialist skills and services.
• Active surveillance-involves visiting health facilities,
talking to health-care providers and reviewing medical records
to identify suspected cases of disease
• Involves physical review of medical records and registers,
interviews with health workers and visits to relevant
outpatient clinics and hospital wards under surveillance.
• When a case is found, the active surveillance staff investigate
it, document clinical and epidemiological data, arrange to
send appropriate laboratory specimens and report the
information rapidly.
• usually used when a disease is targeted for eradication or
elimination,
• Is more difficult to set up and expensive to conduct.
• It does not replace passive surveillance but complements
it.
• If conducted regularly it has the following advantages:
• helps to improve the timeliness and accuracy of case
detection and reporting.
• Enables rapid case investication ,including taking
laborator specimens.
• Is closely linked to the laboratory system through
individual case identification.
• Enables timely action to be taken in response to the
detected case.
Passive
surveillance/nationwide
routine
Active surveillance
Population under
surveillance
Whole country All cases attending selected
health facilities
Outcome
measures
Cases and death
Incidence rates
Trends in epidemiology
Cases and deaths in selected
heath facility
Full case investigation with
details on each case
Advantages Can provide accurate rates
and data on burden if
reporting
is complete and supported
by reliable laboratory
results
Directs eradication or
elimination programmes
Can be expanded to include
additional diseases as
Required.
Rapid detection of outbreaks
Disadvantages Needs extensive clinical
laboratory resources
Reporting is rarely complete
and timely
Heavy demands on data
management
Resource-intensive
Requires dedicated staff,
transport, management
Heavy demands on data
management
Why Is Surveillance Important?
• Surveillance information has many uses:
• Monitoring disease trends
• Describing natural history of diseases
• Identifying epidemics or new syndromes
• Monitoring changes in infectious agents
• Identifying areas for research
• Evaluating hypotheses
• Planning public health policy
• Evaluating public health policy/interventions
• Examples of uses of surveillance data:
• Evaluating impact of national vaccination campaigns
• Identifying AIDS when unknown syndrome
• Estimating impact of AIDS on US health care system in 1990s
(using mathematical models based on surveillance data)
• Identifying outbreaks of rubella and congenital rubella
among Amish and Mennonite communities in 6 states in
1990 and 1991 (3)
• Monitoring obesity, physical activity,other indicators for
chronic diseases
How to Conduct Surveillance
• Surveillance data allow description and comparison of
patterns of disease by person, place, and time
• Several ways to describe and compare patterns, from
straightforward presentations to statistically complex
analyses
• Will concentrate on simple techniques
How to Conduct Surveillance:
Person
• When available, demographic characteristics such as
gender, age, race/ethnicity, occupation, education level,
socio-economic status, sexual orientation, immunization
status can reveal disease trends
• Example: looking at Streptococcus pneumoniae, a
common cause of community-acquired pneumonia
and bacterial meningitis, examining distribution of cases
by race provides important information about burden of
disease in different populations
How to Conduct Surveillance:
Person – Numbers and Rates
• data collected on Streptococcus pneumoniae from CDC
Emerging Infections Program Network, a surveillance
program that collects data from multiple countries in US
states .
How to Conduct Surveillance:
Person – Numbers and Rates
• Data show majority of cases reported among whites
• Can draw only limited conclusions because race not
recorded for 684 cases (15%)
• Shows only number of reported cases, not rate
• Total number of individuals by race needed to determine
if there is a disproportionate burden of disease among
races
How to Conduct Surveillance: Place
• Best to characterize cases by place of exposure rather
than by place at which cases reported
• The two may differ and place of exposure is more
relevant to epidemiology of a disease
• Example: travelers on a cruise ship exposed to a disease just prior
to disembarking but become symptomatic and are diagnosed
after return to various home locations
• Example: person exposed to disease in small rural town but
referred to tertiary care center 100 miles away where disease is
diagnosed and reported
How to Conduct Surveillance: Place
– Presenting Data
• Data by geographic location can be presented in a table
• Also helpful to use maps to facilitate recognition of
spatial associations in data
• Inferential analysis can also be done using multilevel
modeling, other statistical methods
How to Conduct Surveillance: Time
• Compare number of cases reported in time period of
interest (weeks, months, years) to number of cases
reported during similar historical period
• Usually a delay (sometimes months to years) between
disease onset and date when disease is reported, so
preferable to use date of onset, if available, rather than
date of report
Data Presentation
• Surveillance data must be presented in way that
is easy to understand and interpret
• Many ways to display surveillance data
• Line graphs for displaying data by time
• Maps for presenting data in geographic context
• Graphical displays such as histograms, frequency
polygons, box plots, scatter diagrams, bar charts, pie
charts, or stem-and-leaf displays
• Spot or chloropleth maps
• Single/multivariable tables
• The choice of a particular graph or table depends on type of
data, but presentation should be simple and easy to follow
• Should provide all information necessary to interpret the
figure without referring to text
• Include concise title that describes subject or disease, time,
place (when relevant)
• Define any abbreviations or symbols
• Note any data exclusions
Surveillance methods:
surveys
• Examples:
• National Population Health Survey
• Sante Quebec
• Content:
• Conditions, behaviours not easy to monitor routinely
(mental health problems, smoking, use of
complementary/alternative therapies)
Conclusion
• Surveillance is valuable tool that can serve many
purposes
• When surveillance data is collected, analyzed,
interpreted, reported appropriately, these data can
provide important information about disease patterns to
inform public health practice and policy
THANK YOU

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Surveillance

  • 2. Surveillance • For persons who need to carry out surveillance activities but have little prior experience or training • Also helpful for people who would like to better understand the process and reasoning behind surveillance methods and interpretation
  • 3. SURVEILLANCE • Surveillance is data collection for action. • The mere collection and compilation of disease- related data without analysing them and taking appropriate action is not surveillance. • Disease surveillance is the systematic collection, analysis and dissemination of data on diseases of public health importance so that appropriate action can be taken to either prevent or stop further spread of disease. • It guides disease control activities and measures the impact of immunization services.
  • 4. What Is Surveillance? • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): surveillance is “ongoing systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data essential to the planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health practice, closely integrated with the timely dissemination of these data to those who need to know.”
  • 5. Examples of surveillance • Communicable diseases • Health behaviors: • Drug use, risky sexual behavior • Risk factors for chronic diseases (e.g. smoking) • Environmental risks and diseases • Health care
  • 6. WHY IS DISEASE SURVEILLANCCE NECESSARY ? Disease surveillance is used to • predict or detect disease outbreaks with a view to investigation and containment • Identify high risk population and areas requiring special attention. • Monitor impact and progress towards disease eradication , elimination and control • identify areas in which system performance is poor, so that corrective measures can be taken
  • 7. • monitor programme effectiveness by documenting short- and long-term effects of immunization on disease burden . • identify circulating strains including serotype , genotypes and subtypes . • Determine the frequency of occurrence of a disease in a community and the burden of disease .
  • 8. IMPORTANCE • Collecting data is merely one step • Critical goal is to control and/or prevent diseases • Any data collected must be organized and carefully examined • Any results need to be communicated to public health and medical communities
  • 9. • Vital to communicate results • During potential outbreak so public health and medical communities can help with disease prevention and control efforts • During non-outbreak times to provide information about baseline levels of disease • Baseline provides information to public health officials monitoring health at community level, serves as reference in future outbreaks
  • 10. SURVEILLANC METHODS • Classified as passive active • Passive surveillance-Regular reporting of disease data by all institutions that see patients (or test specimens) and are part of a reporting network. • There is no active search for cases. • It involves passive notification by surveillance sites and reports are generated and sent by local staff.
  • 11. • relies on the cooperation of health-care providers — laboratories, hospitals, health facilities and private practitioners — to report. • Once the data have been received, they must be compiled and then analysed to monitor disease patterns and identify possible outbreaks. • Involves the regular collection and reporting of surveillance data and is the commonest method. • Less expensive than other surveillance strategies and covers wide areas (whole countries or provinces) • However, because it relies on an extensive network of health workers, it can be difficult to ensure completeness and timeliness of data
  • 12. • In Some countries might not have the capacity or resources to identify all cases a disease, either because the diagnosis of the disease requires specialized clinical skills or because laboratory resources are not available throughout the country. • Under these circumstances, passive surveillance can be adapted in a number of ways, depending on the completeness and quality of data required, financial constraints and the availability of specialist skills and services.
  • 13. • Active surveillance-involves visiting health facilities, talking to health-care providers and reviewing medical records to identify suspected cases of disease • Involves physical review of medical records and registers, interviews with health workers and visits to relevant outpatient clinics and hospital wards under surveillance. • When a case is found, the active surveillance staff investigate it, document clinical and epidemiological data, arrange to send appropriate laboratory specimens and report the information rapidly. • usually used when a disease is targeted for eradication or elimination,
  • 14. • Is more difficult to set up and expensive to conduct. • It does not replace passive surveillance but complements it. • If conducted regularly it has the following advantages: • helps to improve the timeliness and accuracy of case detection and reporting. • Enables rapid case investication ,including taking laborator specimens. • Is closely linked to the laboratory system through individual case identification. • Enables timely action to be taken in response to the detected case.
  • 15. Passive surveillance/nationwide routine Active surveillance Population under surveillance Whole country All cases attending selected health facilities Outcome measures Cases and death Incidence rates Trends in epidemiology Cases and deaths in selected heath facility Full case investigation with details on each case Advantages Can provide accurate rates and data on burden if reporting is complete and supported by reliable laboratory results Directs eradication or elimination programmes Can be expanded to include additional diseases as Required. Rapid detection of outbreaks Disadvantages Needs extensive clinical laboratory resources Reporting is rarely complete and timely Heavy demands on data management Resource-intensive Requires dedicated staff, transport, management Heavy demands on data management
  • 16. Why Is Surveillance Important? • Surveillance information has many uses: • Monitoring disease trends • Describing natural history of diseases • Identifying epidemics or new syndromes • Monitoring changes in infectious agents • Identifying areas for research • Evaluating hypotheses • Planning public health policy • Evaluating public health policy/interventions
  • 17. • Examples of uses of surveillance data: • Evaluating impact of national vaccination campaigns • Identifying AIDS when unknown syndrome • Estimating impact of AIDS on US health care system in 1990s (using mathematical models based on surveillance data) • Identifying outbreaks of rubella and congenital rubella among Amish and Mennonite communities in 6 states in 1990 and 1991 (3) • Monitoring obesity, physical activity,other indicators for chronic diseases
  • 18. How to Conduct Surveillance • Surveillance data allow description and comparison of patterns of disease by person, place, and time • Several ways to describe and compare patterns, from straightforward presentations to statistically complex analyses • Will concentrate on simple techniques
  • 19. How to Conduct Surveillance: Person • When available, demographic characteristics such as gender, age, race/ethnicity, occupation, education level, socio-economic status, sexual orientation, immunization status can reveal disease trends • Example: looking at Streptococcus pneumoniae, a common cause of community-acquired pneumonia and bacterial meningitis, examining distribution of cases by race provides important information about burden of disease in different populations
  • 20. How to Conduct Surveillance: Person – Numbers and Rates • data collected on Streptococcus pneumoniae from CDC Emerging Infections Program Network, a surveillance program that collects data from multiple countries in US states .
  • 21. How to Conduct Surveillance: Person – Numbers and Rates • Data show majority of cases reported among whites • Can draw only limited conclusions because race not recorded for 684 cases (15%) • Shows only number of reported cases, not rate • Total number of individuals by race needed to determine if there is a disproportionate burden of disease among races
  • 22. How to Conduct Surveillance: Place • Best to characterize cases by place of exposure rather than by place at which cases reported • The two may differ and place of exposure is more relevant to epidemiology of a disease • Example: travelers on a cruise ship exposed to a disease just prior to disembarking but become symptomatic and are diagnosed after return to various home locations • Example: person exposed to disease in small rural town but referred to tertiary care center 100 miles away where disease is diagnosed and reported
  • 23. How to Conduct Surveillance: Place – Presenting Data • Data by geographic location can be presented in a table • Also helpful to use maps to facilitate recognition of spatial associations in data • Inferential analysis can also be done using multilevel modeling, other statistical methods
  • 24. How to Conduct Surveillance: Time • Compare number of cases reported in time period of interest (weeks, months, years) to number of cases reported during similar historical period • Usually a delay (sometimes months to years) between disease onset and date when disease is reported, so preferable to use date of onset, if available, rather than date of report
  • 25. Data Presentation • Surveillance data must be presented in way that is easy to understand and interpret • Many ways to display surveillance data • Line graphs for displaying data by time • Maps for presenting data in geographic context • Graphical displays such as histograms, frequency polygons, box plots, scatter diagrams, bar charts, pie charts, or stem-and-leaf displays • Spot or chloropleth maps • Single/multivariable tables
  • 26. • The choice of a particular graph or table depends on type of data, but presentation should be simple and easy to follow • Should provide all information necessary to interpret the figure without referring to text • Include concise title that describes subject or disease, time, place (when relevant) • Define any abbreviations or symbols • Note any data exclusions
  • 27. Surveillance methods: surveys • Examples: • National Population Health Survey • Sante Quebec • Content: • Conditions, behaviours not easy to monitor routinely (mental health problems, smoking, use of complementary/alternative therapies)
  • 28. Conclusion • Surveillance is valuable tool that can serve many purposes • When surveillance data is collected, analyzed, interpreted, reported appropriately, these data can provide important information about disease patterns to inform public health practice and policy