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Death Registrations

Description

While HCV infections are associated with substantial morbidity and mortality in the United States, deaths due to HCV may not be detected well in Utah’s surveillance system. New interferon-free drugs for HCV can result in virologic cure with limited side effects, but treatment is expensive. It will therefore be increasingly important that public health accurately document the prevalence of HCV and outcomes, such as death, to inform policy makers and others who are responsible for allocating resources. A previous analysis conducted in Utah determined that a two-step methodology electronically linking death certificate data to HIV surveillance data was effective at ascertaining previously unreported deaths and cases in the HIVinfected population. Similarly, linkage to death certificate records may also provide an important avenue to identify deaths among the chronic HCV cases included in surveillance data and identify cases of HCV not previously reported to public health in Utah.

Objective

To evaluate the ascertainment of deaths among hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected persons reported to public health and to identify additional HCV cases not reported to public health in Utah through review of death certificate data.

Submitted by teresa.hamby@d… on
Description

In October 2015, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released health advisory #384 to inform people about increases in fentanyl fatalities. Florida’s statewide syndromic surveillance system, Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics (ESSENCE-FL), captures electronic death record data in near real time which allows for the monitoring of mortality trends across the state. One limitation of using death record data for fentanyl surveillance is the lack of a fentanyl-specific overdose ICD-10 code; however, the literal cause of death fields (“literals”) provide a level of detail that is rich enough to capture mentions of fentanyl use. The “literals” are a free text field on the death certificate, recorded by a physician at the time of death and detail the factors that led to the death. ESSENCE-FL has the benefit of not only receiving death record data in near real-time, but also receiving the literal cause of death fields. This work analyzes trends in fentanyl-associated mortality in Florida over time by using the literal cause of death fields within death records data obtained from ESSENCE-FL.

Objective

To characterize fentanyl-associated mortality in Florida using free text queries of the literal causes of death listed on death certificates.

 

 

Submitted by uysz on
Description

Pakistan ranks 26th in Childhood mortality rates, globally. Pakistan, with other 4 countries is responsible for about half of the deaths of children age under 5. Despite such burden vital registration system is not well established, health facilities are not easily accessible and mostly deaths occur at home, making identification of cause of death (COD) difficult.

Objective

To identify Cause of deaths among children below age of 5years from a prospective cohort of women in one urban and four peri-urban settings of Karachi, Pakistan

 

Submitted by uysz on
Description

The mortality monitoring system (initiated in 2009 during the influenza A(H1N1) pandemic) is a collaboration between the Centre for Infectious Disease Control (CIb) and Statistics Netherlands. The system monitors nation-wide reported number of deaths (population size 2014: 16.8 million) from all causes, as cause of death information is not available real-time. Data is received from Statistics Netherlands by weekly emails. 

Objective

Weekly numbers of deaths are monitored to increase the capacity to deal with both expected and unusual (disease) events such as pandemic influenza, other infections and non-infectious incidents. The monitoring information can potentially be used to detect, track and estimate the impact of an outbreak or incident on all-cause mortality. 

Submitted by Magou on

This seminar will share how states are using existing Electronic Death Registration Systems (ERDS) for active surveillance and EDRS’ role in mass fatality planning. CDC will present an a conceptual framework to leverage EDRS and other available databases to develop an electronic national disaster mortality surveillance system.

Speakers and Topics

Introduction and Overview

Speaker: Ann Madsen, PhD, MPH, Director, Office of Vital Statistics, Bureau of Vital Statistics, NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene