Surveillance: Abdullatif Husseini, MSC, MPH, PHD
Surveillance: Abdullatif Husseini, MSC, MPH, PHD
Surveillance: Abdullatif Husseini, MSC, MPH, PHD
Schewara, 2012
What is surveillance?
• “Surveillance is a fundamental role of public
health.
• Surveillance may be carried out to monitor
changes in disease frequency or to monitor
changes in the levels of risk factors.
• Much of our information about morbidity and
mortality from disease comes from programs
of systematic disease surveillance.”
Gordis, 2014
Surveillance today
• Traditionally epidemiological surveillance was
focused on infectious diseases.
• Over time, surveillance has expanded to encompass
non-infectious conditions such chronic diseases,
injuries, and environmental and occupational
exposures, as well as personal behaviors that
promote health and prevent disease.
Objectives of surveillance 1:
1. Early detection of changes in disease
patterns and risk factors to enable
appropriate actions
2. Description of basic epidemiology ( e.g.
natural history) of a disease
3. Links epidemiological changes and disease
trends to health services and research
4. Forecast trends in disease frequency
5. Early warning of epidemics
Objectives of surveillance 2
5. Monitoring trends in disease, microbial
agents and risk factors to:
a- asses priorities for intervention
b- evaluate control and prevention programs
c- monitor changes in infectious diseases
d- detect changes in health practices or medical care
e- facilitate planning
6. Identify the emergence of new diseases
7. Identify risk factors
Components of a surveillance system
• Disease surveillance
• Population data
Surveillance approaches
• Passive (provider initiated) routine surveillance
• Active (health department initiated) routine
surveillance
• Sentinel-site surveillance (monitoring of key health
events through sentinel: sites, providers, events, and
vectors/animals)
• Outbreak investigation: an active process for early
detection of causes and prevention of outbreaks
Criteria for selecting diseases to be
included in the surveillance system
• “Conditions for which surveillance can effectively lead to
prevention.
• Surveillance systems should reflect the overall disease
burden of the community.
• Incidence and prevalence
• Indices of severity (case-fatality ratio)
• Mortality rate and premature mortality
• An index of lost productivity (bed-disability days)
• Medical costs
• Preventability
• Epidemic potential
• Information gaps on new diseases.”
Gordis, 2014
Issues Regarding Passive Surveillance
• Completeness and quality of the data
• Largely depend on staff already working in the
system and does not require costly additional
resources
• Underreporting & incomplete reporting
• “Reporting instruments must be simple and
brief”
• Relatively inexpensive and easy to develop
Gordis, 2014
Issues Regarding Active Surveillance
• Usually more expensive
• Uses devoted personnel to actively collect
data form the filed compared to existing staff
in passive surveillance
• “may involve interviewing physicians and
patients, reviewing medical records”
• More difficult to develop initially compared to
passive surveillance
Gordis, 2014
Disease Sources of Information
• Disease notification
• Morbidity and mortality registration
• Health unit based surveillance
• Population based surveillance
• Laboratory based surveillance (e.g. new subtypes of flu,
or serotypes of Salmonella)
• Other data sources such as:
– Vaccination adverse reaction records
– Drug utilization records
Sources of data
• “mortality and morbidity reports
• hospital records
• laboratory diagnoses
• outbreak reports
• vaccine utilization
• sickness absence records
• biological changes in agent, vectors, or reservoirs
• blood banks.”
Bonita et al, 2006
Natural History of Disease
Disease progression
Population data sources
– The community
Analysis of surveillance data
Alexander D. langmuir
References:
• Gordis L, 2009. Epidemiology, 5th ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier
Saunders.
• Bonita R, Beaglehole R, Kjellstrom T, 2006. Basic
Epidemiology. Geneva: WHO.
• Thacker SB, Berkelman RL. Public health surveillance in the
United States. Epidemiologic reviews. 1988;10:164-90.
• Schwerha J. Medical Surveillance. SUPERCOURSE PPT
presentation, 2012.
• Ching P. Analysis, Reporting, and Feedback of Surveillance
Data part I&II. SUPERCOURSE PPT presentation, 2012.
• Other SUPERCOURSE PPT presentations.