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Taniguchi Kiyosu

Description

Unfortunately, confirmation and notification of all A/H1N1 (2009) patients in Japan was ceased on 24 July when the cumulative number of patients was about 5000. After that, as all suspected patients are not necessarily confirmed or reported, the only official surveillance was the sentinel surveillance for influenza-like-illness (ILI) patients from 5000 clinics accounting for almost 10% of all clinics and hospitals in Japan. However, because the surveillance results are reported weekly, it tends to lack timeliness. To collect and analyze the information in more timely manner, we, Infectious Disease Surveillance Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, developed a full automatic daily reporting system of ILI patients. Using this information, we had estimated Rv and predict its course in every week.

Objective

This paper summarized our effort for real-time estimation of pandemic influenza A/H1N1pdm in Japan.

Submitted by uysz on
Description

In 2011, March 11th, the big earthquake attacked eastern Japan, and forced a lot of people to live in evacuation sites. Since those evaluation sites have high density of population and sanitary condition was poor in these sites, outbreaks of influenza, noro virus or other infectious diseases were concerned.

Objective

For an early detection and control of an infectious disease outbreak, we developed and have been operating syndromic surveillance for evacuation sites, "evacuation site surveillance."

Submitted by elamb on
Description

In 2011, March 11th, the big earthquake attacked eastern Japan followed by huge tsunami and nuclear plant accident. Consequently a lot of people could not help living in evacuation sites. Since those evaluation sites have high density of population and were not necessarily good in sanitary condition, outbreaks of influenza, norovirus or other infectious diseases were concerned.

Objective

For an early detection and control of an infectious disease outbreak, we developed and have been operating syndromic surveillance for evacuation sites, "evacuation site surveillance."

Submitted by elamb on
Description

The first prototype syndromic surveillance in Japan was used during the G8 summit meeting in 2000 with two local prefectures involved. The second trial syndromic surveillance and the first internet-based surveillance used in 2002 for the Japan-Korea 2002 World Cup soccer games. Since 2002, surveillances on over-the-counter medications, ambulance call, and outpatient visits were explored as syndromic approach candidates for early detection. Internet-based events and case reporting frame work has been reviewed for outpatient visits daily reporting concurrently. Limited spread of electrical patient record and vast range of commercialized medical record formats posed obstacles to nationwide syndromic surveillance implementation.

Recent threats from bioterrorism and influenza pandemic empowered Japanese government introducing surveillance of rapid detection mechanism. In line with the revision of the Infection Control Law took place in 2007 April, national syndromic surveillance system was implemented.

 

Objective

This paper describes recent establishment of national surveillance system for early detection of infectious diseases in Japan. With diagnostic data fed from existed routine surveillance, newly introduced system is expected to provide timely information for control response. We aim to facilitate cross-informative regional surveillance by sharing our experience and system frame work.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

Infection Control Law in Japan has asked doctors to cooperate in syndromic surveillance for pandemic flu and smallpox since 2007. However, doctors have to report by typing the number of patients on the web site, or by sending a fax to local public health centers. It imposes the heavy burden of reporting, and thus it has not worked well yet. Therefore, we need an automatic system for routine syndromic surveillance.

 

Objective

We performed some syndromic surveillance system for the Hokkaido Toyako G8 summit meeting in July 2008 in Japan as a counter-measure to bioterrorism attack or other health emergency. This presentation shows the workable syndromic surveillance systems in Japan.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

To evaluate the potential of using the sales of Over the Counter (OTC) medicines for early detection of infections of public health concern, retrospective analysis of the sales of OTC common cold medications used for influenza-like illness (ILI) has been carried out in Japan since 2003. This presentation assess correlations and predictability of OTC sales to ILI for 2004-05 influenza season and compares with the results from 2003-04 season to discuss on robustness and versatility of OTC sales surveillance.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

I Medical services for outpatients are well developed due to universal public health insurance. Even patients who have mild symptoms can visit a clinic freely in Japan. Thus the monitoring of outpatients provides very timely information to detect unusual events. On the other hand, EMRs haven't had much penetration, less than 10% at clinics and 20% at hospitals. Moreover, almost nobody uses HL7 or other standards for EMRs. Therefore, it is very difficult to develop a syndromic surveillance system using EMRs like the U.S. We have to develop a system for each EMR and it has a heavy cost. In Japan, there are about 40 thousand pharmaciesand almost half of drugs prescribed are delivered through pharmacies. Almost all pharmacies record prescriptions electronically. Objective: So that full automatic syndromic surveillance cover the whole of nation, we construct the system using the information of prescription.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

We started an experimental syndromic surveillance using 1)OTC and 2)outpatients visits, in the last year and included 3)ambulance transfer from this year so as to early detect bioterrorism attack (BTA). 

Submitted by elamb on
Description

Timely surveillance of disease outbreak events of public health concern currently requires detailed and time consuming manual analysis by experts. Recently in addition to traditional information sources, the World Wide Web has offered a new modality in surveillance, but the massive collection of multilingual texts which must be processed in real time presents an enormous challenge.

 

Objective

In this paper we present a summary of the BioCaster system architecture for Web rumour surveillance, the rationale for the choices made in the system design and an empirical evaluation of topic classification accuracy for a gold-standard of English and Vietnamese news.

Submitted by elamb on