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NYC Syndromic Surveillance. IFH HIT Meaningful Use Workshop 10/1/2010 Marlena Plagianos, MS NYCDOHMH mplagian@health.nyc.gov. What is Biosurveillance?.
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NYC Syndromic Surveillance IFH HIT Meaningful Use Workshop 10/1/2010 Marlena Plagianos, MS NYCDOHMH mplagian@health.nyc.gov
What is Biosurveillance? • “Collection and integration of timely health-related information for public health action achieved through the early detection, characterization, and situation awareness of exposures and acute human health events of public health significance.” Aaron T Fleischauer, PhD; Pamela S Diaz, MD; Daniel M Sosin MD . Biosurveillance: A Definition, Scope and Description of Current Capability for a National Strategy. Advances in Disease Surveillance 2008;5:175
Traditional Surveillance • Case definitions • Historically low compliance • Laboratory confirmation can be slow • Still important (e.g. H1N1 in NYC)
Laboratory Confirmation Making firm diagnosis commonly relies on lab result Limited in-house testing in outpatient setting (minutes) Commercial laboratory testing takes time (days-weeks)
Syndromic Surveillance • Pre-diagnostic indicators of disease • Readiness scenarios: bioterrorism, pandemics • Objectives: • Timely, sensitive, specific surveillance • Detect outbreak before ‘astute clinician’ • Typical Process
EHR Syndromic Surveillance • The Primary Care Information Project (PCIP) uses different EHR data sources to conduct & pilot its syndromic surveillance activities • Some syndromes tracked using EHR data are: • Influenza-like Illness (ILI) • Fever • Gastrointestinal Illness (GI) • Case definitions for these syndromes based upon text in these structured fields: • Chief Complaint • Measured Temperature • Diagnosis (ICD-9 CM Code)
Aggregate Level Syndromic Data • Only “Count” Data is collected
Electronic Health Record Syndromic SurveillanceDuring 2009 Pandemic H1N1 in NYC
Objective • To determine whether the timing of the increase in patient visits was different at emergency departments from primary care clinics during the spring 2009 H1N1 influenza outbreak across the 5 boroughs of NYC
Study Sites l 58 Primary Care Providers (PCP): • 9 Institute for Family Health (IFH) clinics • 49 practices enrolled in the NYCDOHMH PCIP (30 visits/day) v50 Emergency Departments • 247 visits/day
Methods • Influenza-like Illness (ILI) as a broad estimate of H1N1
Findings • Emergency Departments experienced an increase in patients with ILI before Primary Care Providers • PCPs were vastly under-utilized during the outbreak • NYCDOHMH changed messaging to encourage visiting PCPs instead of EDs for mild illness
Online Resources CDC Flu Surveillance http://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/fluactivity.htm Distribute http://www.isdsdistribute.org/