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Operational Considerations and Early Successes with a Statewide Public Health Surveillance System

Description

In 2004, the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) partnered with the Regenstrief Institute to begin collecting syndromic data from 14 ED’s to monitor bioterrorism-related events and other public health emergencies. Today, Indiana’s public health emergency surveillance system (PHESS) receives approximately 5,000 daily ED visits as real-time HL7 formatted surveillance data from 55 hospitals. The ISDH analyzes these data using ESSENCE and initiates field investigations when human review deems necessary.1 The Marion County Health Department, located in the state’s capitol and most populous county, is the first local health department in Indiana using ESSENCE.

 

Objective

This paper describes how local and state stakeholders interact with Indiana’s operational PHESS, including resources allocated to syndromic surveillance activities and methods for managing surveillance data flow. We also describe early successes of the system.

Submitted by elamb on