Surveillance and Trends Flashcards
What is the driver of public health action?
Surveillance.
What is the definition of surveillance?
*Ongoing, *systematic collection, *analysis, *interpretation, evaluation and dissemination of population-based health-related information to monitor and improve the health of populations
Define ongoing in the definition of surveillance.
Need many data points to understand what falls in the normal versus abnormal range (find baseline).
Need to collect data CONTINUOUSLY.
Data collected at ROUTINE INTERVALS.
Critical to timely response.
Collected over long time period.
Why is data collected over a long time period for surveillance?
To determine trends and burden of disease.
Define systematic in the definition of surveillance.
Use standard case definition for reporting disease.
Allows for comparison across populations.
Collect data in same way over time.
What is case definition?
Number of criteria a disease needs to meet.
Define analysis in definition of surveillance.
Analyzing and using surveillance data justifies collection by using for PH action.
Examined by time, place, person.
Compare burden of disease and how it differs over time.
Allow for identification of pattern and trends.
Define interpretation in definition of surveillance.
Analyst must understand context of numbers.
Technology can change over time.
Differences in reporting mechanisms.
Explain the extension of police authority to states to protect public health.
Police powers include basic communicable disease activities to protect public against natural, accidental, or intentional threats.
Explain how some states have authority to require disease notification.
Conditions vary state to state.
States are primary repository of surveillance data and have authority to collect and hold data.
Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) votes to approve which disease should be reported to CDC and states voluntarily and without identifying information share that.
What is the difference between reporting and notifying a disease?
Reportable means to a certain state (reported to state by law).
Notifiable means disease should be reported to CDC (as decided by CSTE).
What are the types of surveillance?
5 types:
Case-based Sentinel surveillance Population-based surveys Lab-based Secondary uses of data
Explain case-based surveillance.
Provider or lab reported each case they diagnose to state department based on list.
Typically only positive tests reported.
Explain sentinel surveillance.
Conducted in subset of population.
Pick places that reasonably represent population as a whole.
Less resource intensive by making sure underlying population represented.
Good for monitoring trends but not good at capturing rare events.
Explain population-based surveys.
Happens on a regular basis and same questions every year to monitor BH and health.