| Literature DB >> 25879899 |
James L Hadler, Rebecca Lampkins, Jennifer Lemmings, Meredith Lichtenstein, Monica Huang, Jeffrey Engel.
Abstract
Since 2001, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) periodically has conducted a standardized national assessment of state health departments' core epidemiology capacity (1-4). During August-September 2013, CSTE sent a web-based questionnaire to state epidemiologists in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. The questionnaire inquired into workforce capacity and technology advancements to support public health surveillance. Measures of capacity included the total number of epidemiologists, a self-assessment of the state's ability to carry out four of the 10 essential public health services* most relevant to epidemiologists, and program-specific epidemiology capacity. This report summarizes the results, which indicated that in 2013, most of these measures were at their highest level since assessments began in 2001, including the number of epidemiologists, the percentage of state health departments with substantial-to-full (>50%) capacity for three of the 10 essential public health services, and the percentage with substantial-to-full epidemiology capacity for eight of 10 program areas. However, >50% of states reported minimal-to-no (<25%) epidemiology capacity for four of 10 program areas, including occupational health (55%), oral health (59%), substance abuse (73%), and mental health (80%). Federal, state, and local agencies should work together to develop a strategy to address continued outstanding gaps in epidemiology capacity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25879899 PMCID: PMC5779539
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURE 1Percentage of state health departments reporting substantial-to-full (>50%) capacity in four essential services of public health — Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists Epidemiology Capacity Assessment, United States,* 2004, 2006, 2009, and 2013
* 50 states and the District of Columbia.
FIGURE 2Percentage of state health departments reporting substantial-to-full (>50%) capacity in epidemiology and surveillance programs, by program area — Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists Epidemiology Capacity Assessment, United States,* 2004, 2006, 2009, and 2013
Abbreviations: ID = infectious diseases, CD = chronic diseases, MCH = maternal and child health, BT = bioterrorism and emergency response, EH = environmental health, IJ = injury, OccH = occupational health, OrH = oral health, SA = substance abuse.
* 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Number and percentage of state health departments with selected technology capacities to support epidemiology and surveillance — Council of state and Territorial Epidemiologists Epidemiology Capacity Assessment, United States,* 2009 and 2013
| Technology capacity | 2009 | 2013 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| No. | (%) | No. | (%) | |
| Automated ELR | 27 | (53) | 33 | (66) |
| Expanded no. reportable conditions due to ELR (among those with ELR) | 10 | (37) | 13 | (39) |
| Cluster-detection software | 12 | (24) | 15 | (29) |
| Syndromic surveillance | – | – | 40 | (78) |
| Outbreak-management system | 16 | (31) | 23 | (45) |
| Geocode births | 20 | (39) | 25 | (49) |
| Geocode deaths | 21 | (41) | 24 | (47) |
| Geocode all reportable diseases | 15 | (29) | 19 | (37) |
| Geocode some reportable diseases | 28 | (55) | 31 | (61) |
Abbreviation: ELR = electronic laboratory reporting
50 states and District of Columbia. All questions responded to by 51 jurisdictions except automated ELR had 50 respondents in 2013. Syndromic surveillance capacity not asked in 2009.