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EMS

Description

The EPA Water Security initiative contamination warning system detection strategy involves the use of multiple monitoring and surveillance components for timely detection of drinking water contamination in the distribution system. The public health surveillance (PHS) component of the contamination warning system involves the analysis of health-related data to identify disease events that may stem from drinking water contamination. Public health data include hospital admission reports, infectious disease surveillance, emergency medical service reports, 911 calls and poison control center calls. Automated analysis of these data streams results in alerts, which are investigated by health department epidemiologists. A comprehensive operational strategy was developed to describe the processes and procedures involved in the the initial investigation and validation of a PHS alert. The operational strategy established specific roles and responsibilities, and detailed procedural flow descriptions. The procedural flow concluded with the determination of whether or not an alert generated from surveillance of public health data streams is indicative of a possible water contamination incident.

 

Objective

To develop standard operating procedures to identify or rule out possible water contamination as a cause for a syndromic surveillance alarm.

Submitted by hparton on
Description

In 2017, FL Department of Health (DOH) became one of thirty-two states plus Washington, D.C funded by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) under the ESOOS program. One of the objectives of this funding was to increase the timeliness of reporting on non-fatal opioid overdoses through syndromic surveillance utilizing either the emergency department (ED) or Emergency Medical Services (EMS) data systems. Syndromic case validation is an essential requirement under ESOOS for non-fatal opioid-involved overdose (OIOD). FL's ESOOS program conducted OIOD validation and quality monitoring of EMS case definitions, using data from FL's Emergency Medical Services Tracking and Reporting System (EMSTARS). We examined measurement validity with OIOD cases identified from FL's statewide hospital billing database, FL Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA).

Objective: Assess the validity of Florida (FL) Enhanced State Opioid Overdose Surveillance (ESOOS) non-fatal syndromic case definitions.

Submitted by elamb on