150 likes | 284 Views
Early Warning System for CD. Dr Venanzio Vella, Senior Epidemiologist, CEEN. Objective of EWS for CD. Early detection of outbreaks; Timely outbreak response and control; Monitoring trends; Evaluate impact of control activities. How the EWS should work. LAB.
E N D
Early Warning System for CD Dr Venanzio Vella, Senior Epidemiologist, CEEN
Objective of EWS for CD • Early detection of outbreaks; • Timely outbreak response and control; • Monitoring trends; • Evaluate impact of control activities.
How the EWS should work LAB The central level aggregates the aggregates of the intermediate level Feedbacks 52 weekly reports per year per health unit are aggregated at intermediate level Feedbacks Feedback Feedback Feedback As soon as a health worker see a patient with symptoms matching the case definition of diseases X, Y. Z tally the case on a weekly form Outbreak control Private & public hospitals, clinics, etc GPs etc patients
Reasons for the problematic data The central level has difficulties in deciding is an increase in aggregate numbers is real of due to vagaries of reporting LAB can only detect a few diseases No Feedbacks 50% of expected weekly reports are sent to the intermediate level in certain periods of the year, 100% in other periods Feedbacks Not all epidemics are investigated No Feedback Feedback Feedback Some health worker stop reporting all cases and the decision of what and when to report becomes subjective. Private & public hospitals, clinics, etc GPs etc patients
Basic Principles • Guidelines on standardized data collection; • Legislative Framework; • Training to fill skill gaps; • Quality control of data and feedback; • Timely Monitoring to identify, investigate and control outbreaks; • Evaluation of results.
Web Portal • Software upgrading to include the data on CDs; • Update of the indicators collected by the previous health project; • Availability of statistical reports and other relevant documents; • Training on using the portal.
Guidelines & Training • Assessment against guidelines; • Gaps in procedures, skills, resources; • Training to fill gaps;
Standardization • Standard List of Diseases; • Standard Case Definition; • Standard way of reporting; • Behavioural practices of reporting (incentive, feedbacks, enforcement of legal obligations);
Quality control of data • Completeness of weekly reports; • Timeliness of weekly reports; • Trend analysis; • Outliers spotting; • Feedback to periphery to confirm, justify, correct, incentivise.
Timely Monitoring to assess change • Quality control to avoid vagaries of reporting; • Threshold levels • Fixed values e.g. One case of Cholera, Polio, Measles is sufficient to issue an outbreak alert (likelihood of individual cases resulting in an outbreak), haemorrhagic fevers (severity of the disease); • Values exceeding expected trends
Speedy confirmation of outbreaks • Laboratory capacity; • Training; • Human & other resources; • costs.
Speedy investigation & control • Field Epidemiology Training; • Identification of Source; • Tracing and testing contacts; • Lab confirmation; • Management and containment of spread of outbreaks; • Quarantine control; • Logistics and supplies; • Coordinated multisectoral action; • Communication.
Evaluate • If EWS is complying with criteria -Timeliness (e.g. X% units reporting on time); - Completeness (e.g. X% expected reports received); - Feedback (e.g. X% GPs receiving feedback); • If action is taken (e.g. % events investigated) • If action taken has it been effective.