| Literature DB >> 20540772 |
Michael G Baker1, Sally Easther, Nick Wilson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The new International Health Regulations (IHR) require World Health Organization (WHO) member states to assess their core capacity for surveillance. Such reviews also have the potential to identify important surveillance gaps, improve the organisation of disparate surveillance systems and to focus attention on upstream hazards, determinants and interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20540772 PMCID: PMC3224743 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Framework for classifying events under surveillance (diseases, hazards, determinants and interventions) based on their position along the causal pathway.
Figure 2Framework for carrying out a .
Classification of potential surveillance sector gaps with illustrative examples
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| Surveillance leadership and organisational gap | Lack of sector leadership, coordination, mandate, and supportive organisational structures | No plan for prioritising the development of public health surveillance and limited coordination of existing systems |
| Surveillance workforce gap | Lack of trained workforce in critical areas, such as epidemiology | Shortage of epidemiologists and data analysts to review and interpret findings from surveillance systems |
| Surveillance resource gap | Lack of sector resources in critical areas, such as laboratory services and information technology | Limited information technology development resources for public health sector |
| Surveillance system gap | No surveillance system is established for important disease events, | No surveillance of most common syndromes in primary care (eg, gastroenteritis) |
| Surveillance scope gap | A surveillance system is established, but its type, range of events covered, and scope of information it is designed to collect does not meet its purpose | Surveillance of hepatitis B and C is largely restricted to acute illness rather than chronic infectious cases |
| Surveillance coverage gap | A surveillance system is established, but does not cover all of the necessary populations or settings | Absenteeism surveillance and emergency department syndromic surveillance for influenza-like illness is, in each case, confined to only one region in NZ |
| Surveillance performance gap | An established system doesn't meet necessary requirements for key attributes, such as timeliness, sensitivity and validity | Reporting of hospital discharges and deaths from infectious diseases is complete but not timely, limiting the value of the information for disease control |
| Surveillance integration gap | Surveillance systems exist but do not link information in a way that supports optimal prevention and control measures | Food and water borne disease surveillance is not routinely linked to drinking water distribution zones so limiting its capacity to detect water treatment failures |
| Surveillance analysis and communication gap | Surveillance systems operate but do not analyse and disseminate information in a way that supports effective action | Some national data on hospital-acquired infections is collected for health sector monitoring purposes but is not provided to infectious disease practitioners or policy makers |