| Literature DB >> 20017958 |
Craig B Dalton1, Tony D Merritt, David N Durrheim, Sally A Munnoch, Martyn D Kirk.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Outbreak investigation is a core function of public health agencies. Suboptimal outbreak investigation endangers both public health and agency reputations. While audits of clinical medical and nursing practice are conducted as part of continuous quality improvement, public health agencies rarely make systematic use of structured audits to ensure best practice for outbreak responses, and there is limited guidance or policy to guide outbreak audit.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20017958 PMCID: PMC2813237 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-472
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Criteria for selecting outbreaks for audit.
| Criteria | Example/Details |
|---|---|
| Outbreak of local, state, national or international significance | Multi-state outbreaks |
| Unusual outbreaks | Large outbreaks |
| System issues | Timeliness of epidemiological, environmental or laboratory response |
| Legal or Administrative | Litigation or administrative review of decision making |
| Public/Media concern | A high degree of community concern about the outbreak. Confidentiality provisions should be considered. |
Figure 1Conduct of the audit meeting. Begin with a broad exploration of issues to ensure all views are heard; brainstorming without censure in the middle, and narrowing down to practical actions in the end.
Characteristics and key issues identified using the structured audit methodology in Australia.
| Outbreak Response | Participants | Key Issues Identified for Improvement* |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-state outbreak of Salmonella | State and territory communicable disease and laboratory heads. | Need for national coordination of outbreaks and clarification of national and jurisdictional roles. |
| Influenza outbreaks in aged-care facilities, New South Wales, 2005 [ | Regional health protection staff and Federal health department aged-care accreditation staff | Identify a coordinator to facilitate communication between all stakeholders - facilities, state and federal agencies. |
| Prophylaxis of contacts of food handler with hepatitis A to prevent an outbreak, NSW, 2006.** | Regional health protection staff | Promote early notification of hepatitis from laboratories and general practitioners. |
| Salmonella outbreak in an aged-care facility, NSW, 2008.** | Regional health protection staff and food safety authority | Develop guidelines for appropriate investigation timelines and share them between agencies. |
| Salmonella outbreak in a restaurant, NSW, 2008.** | Regional health protection staff and food safety authority | Develop protocols for joint health and food authority investigations with clarification of roles and legal status. |
*Selected issues only. ** Unpublished internal reports Hunter New England Population Health