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Factors Influencing the Stability and Quality of the French ED Surveillance System

Description

Since 2004, the French syndromic surveillance system Oscour® has been implemented by the national institute for public health surveillance (InVS) and is daily used to detect and follow-up various public health events all over the territory [1]. Beginning with 23 ED in 2004, the coverage and data quality have permanently been increasing until including about 650 ED in August 2015. Initially based on a voluntary participation of ED, a mandatory transmission has been decided in July 2013, with major modification on the structural organization of the data transmission in some regions and on coding practices of the new ED. Besides this juridical context, the system is based on automatically data collection by ED physicians without recording added information for public health surveillance. This represents the main theorical condition to ensure stability and quality, even in case of occurrence of major public health events susceptible to drastically increase the workload [2].

Objective

Identification of the main factors influencing the stability and the quality of the French Emergency departments (ED) syndromic surveillance system.

Submitted by Magou on