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Kipp Aaron

Description

North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT) is the Web-based early event detection and timely public health surveillance system in the North Carolina Public Health Information Network. At the present time NC DETECT monitors five data sources: emergency departments, the statewide poison center, the statewide EMS data collection system, a regional wildlife center and laboratories from the NC State College of Veterinary Medicine for suspicious patterns. NC DETECT receives Carolinas Poison Control Center (CPC) data every 24 hours as of August, 2005. CPC provides the poison hotline for the entire state and handles over 105,000 calls a year 24/7/365. Seventy-five percent of calls are from the general public, with the remainder originating from healthcare providers, pharmacists, law enforcement, etc. CPC is staffed by registered nurses and pharmacists specially trained to provide diagnostic and treatment advice for acute and chronic poisonings to the public and healthcare professionals, backed up by board-certified medical toxicologists.

 

Objective

This paper describes the use of CPC data for early detection of chemical and environmental events and the follow up protocol development process.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

The North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System (NC BEIPS) receives daily emergency department (ED) data from 33 (29%) of the 114 EDs in North Carolina. These data are available via a Web-based portal and the Early Aberration Reporting System to authorized NC public health users for the purpose of syndromic surveillance (SS). Users currently monitor several syndromes including: gastrointestinal severe, fever/rash illness and influenza-like illness. The syndrome definitions are based on the infection-related syndrome definitions of the CDC and search the chief complaint (CC) and, when available, triage note (TN) and initial temperature fields. Some EDs record a TN, which is a brief text passage that describes the CC in more detail. Most research on the utility of ED data for SS has focused on the use of CC. The goal of this study was to determine the sensitivity, specificity, and both positive and negative predictive value of including TN in the syndrome queries.

 

Objective

This study evaluates the addition of TN to syndrome queries used in the NC BEIPS.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

NC BEIPS is a system designed and developed by the NC Division of Public Health (DPH) for early detection of disease and bioterrorism outbreaks or events. It analyzes emergency department (ED) data on a daily basis from 33 (29%) EDs in North Carolina. With a new mandate requiring the submission of ED data to DPH, NC BEIPS will soon have data from all 114 EDs. NC BEIPS also receives data on a daily basis from the Carolinas Poison Center, the Prehospital Medical Information System and the Piedmont Wildlife Center, although syndromic surveillance output from these data sources is still in testing.

Objective

 This paper describes the North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System (NC BEIPS). NC BEIPS is the syndromic surveillance arm of NC PHIN.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

The North Carolina Bioterrorism and Emerging Infection Prevention System (NC BEIPS) serves public health users across North Carolina at the local, regional and state levels, providing syndromic surveillance capabilities.  At the state level, our primary users are in the General Communicable Disease Control Branch of the NC Division of Public Health.  NC BEIPS currently receives daily data from the North Carolina Emergency Department Database (NCEDD), Carolina Poison Control Center (CPC), Prehospital Medical Information System (PreMIS) and the Piedmont Wildlife Center (PWC). Future data sources will include the North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Laboratories.  The PWC is a non-profit organization dedicated to wildlife rehabilitation, education, and scientific study of health and disease in wildlife populations.  PWC admits approximately 3,000 animals annually, including mammals, birds, and reptiles, the majority of which are from 21 counties in central North Carolina.  

Objective

This poster will illustrate how a novel data source, wildlife health center data, is being incorporated and used in a syndromic surveillance system.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

The goal of this project is to compare automated syn-dromic surveillance queries using raw chief complaints to those pre-processed with the Emergency Medical Text Processor (EMT-P) system.

Submitted by elamb on