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Infectious Diseases

Description

Lymphatic filariasis is one of the most prevalent of the tropical diseases, but is also the most neglected.Though significant advances have been made in the understanding both the disease and its control, there is general lack of information about its socioeconomic effects, prevalence and distribution in most endemic societies. Presently, there is global effort towards the elimination of the disease by 2020. The success of this programme depends largely on the use of simple, non-invasive procedures to identify endemic communities. Limb elephantiasis is one of the chronic symptoms of lymphatic filariasis that could be easily diagnosed by persons with minimum training. Therefore, the prevalence of elephantiasis could serve as a useful tool to determine the occurrence and spread of lymphatic filariasis in endemic communities.

 

Objective

This paper describes how limb elephantiasis was used to determine the occurrence and spread of lymphatic filariasis in Kano state, Nigeria as well as the use of the results for further epidemiological studies.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

The first prototype syndromic surveillance in Japan was used during the G8 summit meeting in 2000 with two local prefectures involved. The second trial syndromic surveillance and the first internet-based surveillance used in 2002 for the Japan-Korea 2002 World Cup soccer games. Since 2002, surveillances on over-the-counter medications, ambulance call, and outpatient visits were explored as syndromic approach candidates for early detection. Internet-based events and case reporting frame work has been reviewed for outpatient visits daily reporting concurrently. Limited spread of electrical patient record and vast range of commercialized medical record formats posed obstacles to nationwide syndromic surveillance implementation.

Recent threats from bioterrorism and influenza pandemic empowered Japanese government introducing surveillance of rapid detection mechanism. In line with the revision of the Infection Control Law took place in 2007 April, national syndromic surveillance system was implemented.

 

Objective

This paper describes recent establishment of national surveillance system for early detection of infectious diseases in Japan. With diagnostic data fed from existed routine surveillance, newly introduced system is expected to provide timely information for control response. We aim to facilitate cross-informative regional surveillance by sharing our experience and system frame work.

Submitted by elamb on

Zika virus disease became a significant public health problem in Brazil in 2015 and quickly spread to other South American and Central American countries. While not an overly severe illness for many, Zika virus disease has been shown to increase the probability of severe birth defects in babies when their mothers are infected with the virus during pregnancy. Zika virus disease has also been associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Submitted by elamb on
  • Why the syndrome was created?
    • Track food poisoning and potential disease outbreaks due to infected food 
  • Syndromic surveillance system (e.g., ESSENCE, R STUDIO, RODS, etc.)
    • ESSENCE 
  • Data sources the syndrome was used on (e.g., Emergency room, EMS, Air Quality, etc.)
    • Patient Location Full Details 
  • Fields used to query the data (e.g., Chief Complaint, Discharge Diagnosis, Triage Notes, etc.)
    • CCandDD
Submitted by Anonymous on
Description

Clinical and public health microbiology laboratories of the world are a rich, underutilized resource in monitoring the changing epidemiology of microbial populations worldwide. Two areas of public health importance in which effective use of relevant local data are critical include: 1. guiding local treatment guidelines, informed by knowledge of local patterns of infection and antimicrobial resistance; and 2. the early identification and characterization of outbreaks.

Most laboratories in the developed world and many in the developing world have clinical databases designed to meet the day-to-day needs of clinical reporting, specimen processing, billing, and permanent information storage. Unfortunately, most such systems were not developed with the epidemiological needs of microbiologists, infection control staff, public health authorities, and policy-makers in mind. To address this critical gap, our group at the WHO Collaborating Centre for Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance has developed the WHONET and BacLink softwares to support local, national, and international infectious disease surveillance programs.

 

Objective

This paper describes two free softwares developed for the automated and semi-automated capture, processing, and analysis of microbiology laboratory data. Applications include early detection of hospital and community outbreaks, guiding local treatment guidelines and public health policy, and immediate alert of important pathogens and potential errors in laboratory testing.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

Crude mortality could be valuable for infectious disease surveillance if available in a complete and timely fashion. Syndromic surveillance with weekly deaths has been demonstrated to be useful in France. Such data can be of use for detecting, and tracking the impact, of unusual health events (e.g. pandemic influenza) or other unexpected or unknown events of infectious nature. To evaluate whether these aims can be achieved with crude mortality monitoring in the Netherlands, we investigated trends in death notifications and we tested whether retrospective crude mortality trends, at different days of delay, reflect known trends in infectious pathogens that are associated with death (such as influenza).

 

Objective

To evaluate the potential of mortality data in the Netherlands for real-time surveillance of infectious events.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

Infectious disease surveillance is important for disease control as well as to inform prevention and treatment [1]. While influenza surveillance data coverage and quality has improved significantly in recent years due to resource investments and advances in information technology, the need remains for improvements in data dissemination to the wider community.

Objective

This paper describes a review of modes and styles of the online dissemination of national influenza surveillance data.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

In the past year, three major health care organizations – the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American Medical Association and the Society for Tropical Veterinary Medicine – have officially endorsed the concept of “One Health” recognizing the continuum of communicable infectious disease from humans to animals and animals to humans. Further, there is widespread recognition that continuous robust surveillance of animals is beneficial not only to animal health but to food safety for humans and for early warning of naturally-occurring novel diseases (all of significance have been zoonotic for the past 20 years in the US and elsewhere) and for detecting bioterrorism events (with only one exception, all human bioterrorism agents are animal diseases.)

Submitted by elamb on
Description

Schistosomiasis is a chronic infection caused by flukes belonging to the genus Schistosoma. At least 200 million people, in 74 countries, are infected with the disease and at least 600 million are at risk of infection [1]. Like the majority of the parasitic diseases, schistosomiasis is influenced by human behavior, mainly water use practices and indiscriminate urination and defecation, but also, failure to take advantage of available screening services.

Objective

The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of health education and treatment interventions on the prevalence, intensity and perception of urinary schistosomiasis among school children in three rural communities in Cameroon.

Submitted by elamb on
Description

I Medical services for outpatients are well developed due to universal public health insurance. Even patients who have mild symptoms can visit a clinic freely in Japan. Thus the monitoring of outpatients provides very timely information to detect unusual events. On the other hand, EMRs haven't had much penetration, less than 10% at clinics and 20% at hospitals. Moreover, almost nobody uses HL7 or other standards for EMRs. Therefore, it is very difficult to develop a syndromic surveillance system using EMRs like the U.S. We have to develop a system for each EMR and it has a heavy cost. In Japan, there are about 40 thousand pharmaciesand almost half of drugs prescribed are delivered through pharmacies. Almost all pharmacies record prescriptions electronically. Objective: So that full automatic syndromic surveillance cover the whole of nation, we construct the system using the information of prescription.

Submitted by elamb on