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Comparison of Distribute and ILINet for national influenza surveillance

Description

During the spring of 2009, a public health emergency was declared in response to the emergence of the 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) virus. Owing to the response, timely data were needed to improve situational awareness and to inform public health officials. Traditional influenza surveillance is time-consuming and resource intensive, and electronic data sources are often more timely and resource saving. Collaboration began between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the International Society for Disease Surveillance, and the Public Health Informatics Institute to expand syndromic Emergency Department (ED) surveillance through the Distribute project.

Distribute collects aggregate, daily or weekly reports of influenza-like illness (ILI) and total patient visits to EDs from participating health jurisdictions, stratified by age group and other variables. Additional variables included the three digit zip code of the patient’s residence as well as the disposition and temperature, however not all jurisdictions collect these variables. Distribute data are typically extracted from ED-based electronic health data systems. The ILI definition is determined by the participating jurisdiction that can be a city, county, or state. At the time of analysis, the network consisted of 33 jurisdictions.

Because ILI data reported to Distribute had not been systematically compared with data reported through other surveillance systems, CDC planned an evaluation of the Distribute data, which included a comparison to the Influenza-like Illness Network (ILINet). 

ILINet is a collaborative effort between the CDC, local and state health departments and primary health care providers. The network currently consists of approximately 3000 healthcare providers in all 50 states, Chicago, the District of Columbia, New York City, and the US Virgin Islands. Enrolled providers send CDC weekly reports via internet or fax that consist of the total number of patients seen for any reason and the number of those patients with ILI by age group. ILI is defined as fever (temperature of X1001F (37.8 1C)) and a cough and/or sore throat in the absence of a known cause other than influenza.

 

Objective

To compare ILI data reported to the Distribute surveillance project to data from an existing influenza surveillance system, the US Outpatient ILINet.

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