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Weiss Don

Description

From June 4-8, 2015, the New York City (NYC) syndromic surveillance system detected five one-day citywide signals in sales of over-the-counter (OTC) antidiarrheal medications using the CUSUM method with a 56-day moving baseline. The OTC system monitors sales of two classes of antidiarrheal medications, products with loperamide or bismuth, from two NYC pharmacy chains. To determine if this increase reflected a concerning cluster of diarrheal illness, we examined multiple communicable disease surveillance data systems.

Objective

To investigate a communicable disease syndromic surveillance signal using multiple data sources.

Submitted by teresa.hamby@d… on
Description

The first travel-associated cases of Zika virus infection in New York City (NYC) were identified in January 2016. Local transmission of Zika virus from imported cases is possible due to presence of Aedes albopictus mosquitos. Timely detection of local Zika virus transmission could inform public health interventions and mitigate additional spread of illness. Daily emergency department (ED) visit surveillance to detect individual cases and spatio-temporal clusters of locally-acquired Zika virus disease was initiated in June 2016. 

Objective

Case and cluster identification of emergency department visits related to local transmission of Zika virus. 

Submitted by Magou on