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Introduction to NC Epi Teams. Presentation Overview. What is an Epi Team? Who belongs to an Epi Team? What are the responsibilities of an Epi Team? How does an Epi Team function? What are some examples of Epi Team investigations?. Learning Objectives.
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Presentation Overview • What is an Epi Team? • Who belongs to an Epi Team? • What are the responsibilities of an Epi Team? • How does an Epi Team function? • What are some examples of Epi Team investigations?
Learning Objectives • List the roles on a local health department Epi Team • Describe the four (4) primary responsibilities of an Epi Team • Give an example of a successful NC Epi Team investigation
What is an Epi Team? • Multi-disciplinary public health team • “The purpose of an Epi Team is to prevent, respond to, and recover from disease outbreaks and other public health threats identified in the community.”
Epi Team Roles • Team Leader • Epidemiologist • Microbiologist • Environmental Health Specialist • Interviewer(s) • Clinician • Media Spokesperson
Team Leader • Description • Experience in outbreak investigation and epidemiology • Leader may be different for different outbreaks • Role can be filled by: • County health director • Public health nurse • Epidemiologist • Environmental health specialist
Team Leader • Responsibilities • Convenes Epi Team • Provides oversight for investigation • Assigns tasks to other team members • Serves as contact with other agencies • Conducts regular meetings • Facilitates outbreak interventions • Reports outbreaks
Epidemiologist • Description • Expertise in field epidemiology methods • Experience developing case definitions and questionnaires
Epidemiologist • Responsibilities • Tracks surveillance data • Creates case definitions • Maintains line listing of cases • Trains team members on case finding and follow-up • Provides daily reports on case finding and case counts • Ensures data quality
Clinician • Description • Training in medicine, nursing • Knowledge of disease prevention and treatment • Experience in health education
Clinician • Responsibilities • Consults regarding disease signs and symptoms, transmission, incubation period, and treatment • Administers vaccines and prophylaxis • Collects clinical specimens • Educates cases and contacts • Visits health care providers • Monitors contacts for symptoms
Environmental Health Specialist • Description • Experience with environmental field investigations • Knowledge of food and water safety regulations • Knowledge of environmental sampling
Environmental Health Specialist • Responsibilities • Monitors environmental surveillance data • Conducts field investigations and traceback investigations • Collects environmental samples • Provides guidance on food and water safety regulations and engineering • Implements facility-related control measures
Public Information Officer • Description • Experience developing media messages • Knowledge of risk and crisis communication
Public Information Officer • Responsibilities • Reviews provider and public alerts, fact sheets, and reporting reminders • Prepares/reviews press releases • Responds to media inquires • Ensures availability of appropriate educational materials
Laboratorian • Description • Expertise in laboratory testing • Knowledge of proper specimen collection and transport procedures
Laboratorian • Responsibilities • Provides information on proper collection and transport of clinical specimens • Coordinates submission of specimens to State Laboratory of Public Health
Administrator • Description • Knowledge of local health department policies and procedures • Experience handling staff expenses
Administrator • Responsibilities • Distributes meeting agendas • Records minutes and keeps records of meetings • Tracks staff expenses (overtime, travel reimbursement) • Assures after hours building and cell phone access
IT Specialist • Description • Knowledge of local health department computer system • Experience with database development and management
IT Specialist • Responsibilities • Assists in database development, modification, and maintenance • Provides technical support • Assists with data entry • Equips team with necessary equipment
Responsibilities of an Epi Team • Coordinate disease surveillance activities • Conduct epidemiologic investigations • Gather and analyze information from investigation • Implement public health control measures • Educate the public
Coordinate Disease Surveillance • Monitor routine surveillance data • Compare expected to observed numbers and rates • Investigate reports from healthcare providers • Confirm or refute rumors of outbreaks
Conduct Epidemiologic Investigations • Define cases • Find cases • Collect data • Analyze data • Report findings
Implement Public Health Control Measures • Decide upon appropriate control measures • Work with community partners to implement control measures • Communicate necessity of control measures to affected groups
Educate the Public • Assist hospitals or other healthcare facilities with outbreak management • Provide guidance to agencies dealing with outbreaks • Institutional settings (e.g. long-term care facilities, correctional facilities)
How Does an Epi Team Function? • Communication • Logistics • Incident Command Structure • Coordination with PHRST and DPH • Resources
Epi Team Contact Information • Maintain database of all team members • Name, specialty, best way to contact • Phone Numbers (work, home, cell) • Pager Number • Email Address • Emergency Contact • Distribute to all team members • Update regularly
Internal Communication • Information flows in both directions • Leader should update Epi Team via meetings, conference calls, or email • Members provide regular updates to team leader • Acts as tool for measuring progress • Enables leader to provide feedback and direction to team members
Document Investigation Progress • Keeps team members up to date • Provides material for communication with external partners • Can be used final report
Maintain Daily Log • All steps taken in the investigation • Decisions made and rationale • Contacts: name, position, contact information • Meeting Documentation • Minutes • Follow up actions and those responsible • Photographs
External Communication • Provide regular updates to external partners • NC Division of Public Health • Public Health Regional Surveillance Team • Local stakeholders – hospitals, healthcare providers, other government leaders/agencies, community organizations • General public • Maintain routine communication
How To Work in A Team • Know what is expected • Team member responsibilities • Team member expertise • Resources available for tasks • Know your role • Know who is in charge
Delegation • Team leader will delegate tasks to appropriate team members • Other team members may also need to delegate tasks when overwhelmed • Assign an alternate team leader as a back-up
Long hours, lack of rest Personal health and safety concerns Local sensitivities Unexpected or traumatic event Legal concerns Intense pressure to investigate quickly Interaction with multiple agencies Security concerns Stress Triggers
Stress Management Strategies: • Enough sleep, good nutrition • Strategic pauses • Using humor • Talking to someone • Visualization • Self-talk • Massage • Debriefing
After-action Discussions and Reports / Evaluation • Identifies what worked • Identifies what did not work • Creates a record • Can be used as a reference
Resources for Investigation • Personnel • Equipment • Physical space
NC Epi Team Investigation • DESCRIBE A SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATION OF ONE OF NC’S EPI TEAMS – INCLUDE MISTAKES AND LESSONS LEARNED
NC Epi Team Investigation 2 • DESCRIBE A SUCCESSFUL INVESTIGATION OF ONE OF NC’S EPI TEAMS – INCLUDE MISTAKES AND LESSONS LEARNED
Conclusion • Working as a team requires: • A wide range of expertise • Clear communication • A rapid but careful and systematic approach in dealing with outbreaks
References • Butler JC, Cohen ML, Friedman CR, Scripp RM, Watz CG. Collaboration between public health and law enforcement: new paradigms and partnerships for bioterrorism planning and response. Emerg Infect Dis 2002;8(10):1152-6. • Frace RM, Jahre JA. Policy for managing a community infectious disease outbreak. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1991;12(6):346-7. • Sobel J, Griffin PM, Slutsker l, Swerdlow DL, Tauxe RV. Investigation of multistate foodborne disease outbreaks. Public Health Rep 2002;117(1):8-19.