| Literature DB >> 19666949 |
Boris Igor Pavlin1, Jacob L Kool, Marcus H Samo, Lisanne Gerstel.
Abstract
The authors describe an adapted method, originally developed for infectious disease resource allocation, for prioritizing infectious diseases for inclusion in a Pacific island nation's National Notifiable Diseases List. Using a process that was systematic, transparent, objective, and addressed multiple criteria, a panel of stakeholders judged candidate diseases against 12 objective criteria and arrived at weighted scores for the diseases, which were then ranked. The result was the successful creation of a list of 22 urgently notifiable conditions. However, the process was only incrementally more useful than the use of consensus, and certain anomalies necessitated a reality check and adjustment of the final results. The process described herein may be more useful in settings where there is wide disagreement among stakeholders; it also appears more useful for its original purpose-prioritizing public health resource allocation for infectious disease control. The modifications discussed may make it more relevant to notifiable disease selection.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19666949 DOI: 10.1177/1010539509342748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asia Pac J Public Health ISSN: 1010-5395 Impact factor: 1.399