| Literature DB >> 20875276 |
Colin Robertson1, Kate Sawford, Samson L A Daniel, Trisalyn A Nelson, Craig Stephen.
Abstract
Because many infectious diseases are emerging in animals in low-income and middle-income countries, surveillance of animal health in these areas may be needed for forecasting disease risks to humans. We present an overview of a mobile phone-based frontline surveillance system developed and implemented in Sri Lanka. Field veterinarians reported animal health information by using mobile phones. Submissions increased steadily over 9 months, with ≈4,000 interactions between field veterinarians and reports on the animal population received by the system. Development of human resources and increased communication between local stakeholders (groups and persons whose actions are affected by emerging infectious diseases and animal health) were instrumental for successful implementation. The primary lesson learned was that mobile phone-based surveillance of animal populations is acceptable and feasible in lower-resource settings. However, any system implementation plan must consider the time needed to garner support for novel surveillance methods among users and stakeholders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20875276 PMCID: PMC3294391 DOI: 10.3201/eid1610.100249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Study districts in Sri Lanka where field veterinarians participated in the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System and obtained data on animal health during their daily work activities. Study districts are indicated by red outlines; provincial boundaries are indicated in gray, and district boundaries are indicated in black.
Figure 2Schematic overview of major components of the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System, Sri Lanka. GPS, global positioning system; stakeholders, groups and persons (field veterinarians, administrators, and researchers) whose decision-making and actions are affected by emerging infectious diseases and animal health.
Syndrome groupings in animal health surveys in the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System, Sri Lanka, January 1–September 30, 2009
| Species | Syndrome grouping |
|---|---|
| Buffalo and cattle | Abortion/birth defect |
| Ambulatory lameness | |
| Decreased feed intake/milk production | |
| Gastrointestinal signs | |
| Neurologic signs | |
| Recumbency | |
| Peripheral edema/miscellaneous swelling | |
| Reproduction/obstetrics problems | |
| Respiratory | |
| Skin/ocular/mammary | |
| Sudden or unexplained death | |
| Urologic | |
| Vesicular/ulcerative | |
|
| Other |
| Chickens | Ambulatory |
| Decreased egg production, weight gain, and appetite | |
| Neurologic/recumbent | |
| Peripheral edema/miscellaneous swelling | |
| Respiratory | |
| Skin/ocular | |
| Sudden or unexplained death | |
| Other |
Figure 3Number of survey (black line), global positioning system (red line), and linked survey–global positioning system (blue line) submissions to the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System, by week, Sri Lanka, January 1–September 30, 2009.
Cases in animals in the 4 study districts covered by the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System, Sri Lanka, January 1–September 30, 2009*
| District | No. cattle cases | No. buffalo cases | No. chicken cases | Total no. cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ratnapura | 548 | 106 | 146 | 800 |
| Matara | 388 | 62 | 55 | 505 |
| Nuwara Eliya | 1,095 | 16 | 11 | 1,122 |
| Anuradhapura | 596 | 70 | 57 | 723 |
| Total | 2,627 | 254 | 269 | 3,150 |
*Cases are defined as animal health issues.
Figure 4Frequency of syndrome groups seen by field veterinarians in cattle (A), buffalo (B), and chickens (C) in 4 study districts as part of the Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System, Sri Lanka, January 1–September 30, 2009.
Lessons learned in planning and implementing surveillance systems, Sri Lanka, January 1–September 30, 2009*
| Consideration for surveillance in lower-resource settings | IDSAS experience | Generalized lessons |
|---|---|---|
| Technical | Cell phones permitted timely collection and transmission of data to the surveillance system. Touch screen interfaces were new technology for field veterinarians. | Use of familiar technologies such as basic cell phones will minimize training time. Cell phones enable timely data collection and transmission. |
|
| Ongoing training was essential. A local research assistant made training more effective, in particular because field veterinarians could learn the system in their native languages. | Developing local expertise at the project outset is invaluable for ensuring sustained technical and logistical support. |
| Financial | Hardware required for data collection was relatively inexpensive but much more expensive than hardware available in Sri Lanka. Importing cell phones for the project was challenging. | Where possible, hardware that is locally available should be used. |
|
| Open-source software was used when possible, eliminating licensing as a recurring cost but requiring more training and technical skills to maintain. | Open-source software options should be selected over proprietary options to reduce costs and generate technologic capacity. |
| Political | External funding covered the initial hardware and software costs. | Obtaining external financial support to cover the initial investment required will make implementation more feasible. |
| Support at the provincial level was critical for engagement of field veterinarians. | Garnering support at all levels of government is critical at the early implementation phase. | |
|
| Engagement of key political stakeholders was essential to alleviate fears about potential for harm caused by novel types of surveillance data. | Early in the design process it is important to discern what the outputs of the system will be and their added value. |
| Ethical, societal, and cultural | Government officials were initially concerned about data security. | Build appropriate data security into all components of the system. |
| It was late in the implementation phase when government stakeholders recognized the potential for additional data uses. | Examples of additional uses of data obtained will generate support for new surveillance initiatives. | |
| At the onset of the project, field veterinarians were skeptical about the usefulness of data generated by the IDSAS. However, over time they envisaged how the outputs could be used in disease surveillance and in improving their daily veterinary duties. | Adoption of novel surveillance methods requires user acceptance and new technical skills. Time and experience will enable this transition to occur. | |
| Many farms are geographically isolated making access to field veterinarians difficult. | Quality and quantity of data from surveillance systems are affected by the ability of an animal owner to access animal health services. |
*IDSAS, Infectious Disease Surveillance and Analysis System.