PRIORITIZING INVESTIGATIONS OF REPORTED CASES OF SELECTED ENTERIC INFECTIONS Richard S. Hopkins, MD, MSPH Leah Eisenstein, MPH CSTE annual meeting, Omaha,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chattanooga-Hamilton County Epidemiology Department.
Advertisements

2010 Food Safety Epidemiology Capacity Assessment CSTE Annual Conference June 13, 2011 Lauren Rosenberg, MPA Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists.
Addressing the Challenges of Implementing Systematic, Meaningful Disease-Specific Case-Based Control Measures Leah Eisenstein, MPH Janet Hamilton, MPH.
DR. CHRISTINA RUNDI MINISTRY OF HEALTH, MALAYSIA.
Evaluation of Human Lyme Disease Surveillance in Maine, 2008 – 2010 Megan Saunders 1,2 MSPH, Sara Robinson 2 MPH, Anne Sites 2 MPH MCHES 1 University of.
An Outbreak of Cryptosporidiosis in a Public Swimming Pool Lionel Lim, MBBS, MPH (1) Prathibha Varkey, MD, MPH (1) Pete Giesen, MS (2) Larry Edmonson,
Our vision: Healthier communities, Excellence in healthcare Our values: Teamwork, Honesty, Respect, Ethical, Excellence, Caring, Commitment, Courage Descriptive.
Reportable Disease Update Local Health Department Nurses Meeting June 20, 2013 T.J. Sugg, MPH.
Role of the laboratory in disease surveillance
Dr. Rufaidah Dabbagh Dr Hafsa Raheel. Objectives Understanding the steps to outbreak investigation Discussing new terminology Interpretation of epidemic.
Principles of Outbreak Management
Epidemiologic Preparedness and Response to Terrorist Events Involving the Nation’s Food Supply Jeremy Sobel, MD MPH Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch.
Outbreak Investigation Methods from Mystery to Mastery
SARS Epidemic: A Global Challenge Bong-Min Yang, PhD & Sung-il Cho, MD, PhD of School of Public Health Seoul National University.
Salmonella typhimurium Casey County, KY Jasie L. Jackson, MPH Regional Epidemiologist Epidemiology Rapid Response Team Fall Conference Sept
Unit 4: Monitoring Data Quality For HIV Case Surveillance Systems #6-0-1.
Manish Chaudhary MPH (BPKISH)
Enteric Illness in Neighborhoods with High Proportions of Men Having Sex with Men – New York City Melissa A. Marx, Julia Schillinger, Susan Blank, and.
NOSOCOMIAL INFECTION SURVEILLANCE METHODS Masud Yunesian, M.D., Epidemiologist.
United States Department of Agriculture Food Safety Inspection Service SALMONELLA SUBTYPING RESULTS IN RAW PRODUCTS FSIS Notice /3/2010 Policy Development.
Ethics Conference on Asian Flu Pandemic Ethical considerations among Response to H1N1 Pandemic in China China CDC, CFETP Huilai Ma, Guang Zeng.
1 TB/HIV Project in the Philippines Yumiko Yanase.
Middle East Consortium on Infectious Disease Surveillance (MECIDS) Regional network for laboratory-based surveillance of foodborne diseases.
Infectious Disease Epidemiology Section Office of Public Health Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals
A Summary Of Key Findings From A National Survey Of Voters. #07160.
Toolkit to Promote the Use of the CIFOR Guidelines Jeanette Stehr-Green, MD CSTE Consultant June 13, 2011.
Epidemiology Tools and Methods Session 2, Part 1.
CMG Buttery MB BS MPH Updated – May  Background: In the United States, contaminated food causes approximately 1,000 reported disease outbreaks.
ADHS AND COUNTY STD CONTROL AND PREVENTION PROCESSES AND ACTIVITIES Kerry Kenney ADHS/STDP STATEWIDE STD MEETING April 25, 2008.
Surveillance, Epidemiology, and Tracing Surveillance Part 1: The Surveillance Plan Adapted from the FAD PReP/NAHEMS Guidelines: Surveillance, Epidemiology,
Public Health in Tropics :Further understanding in infectious disease epidemiology Taro Yamamoto Department of International Health Institute of Tropical.
United States Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service FSIS Foodborne Illness Investigations: Current Thinking Scott A. Seys, MPH Chief,
Information Exchange for Detection and Monitoring: Clinical Care to Health Departments Janet J Hamilton, MPH Florida Department of Health.
eHARS to CAREWare Pilot Project Update and Training
WATERBORNE INFECTIOUS DISEASES David L. Taylor, PhD Infection Preventionist Dept of Clinical Epidemiology The Ohio State University Medical Center.
Alliance Discussion with Office of AIDS: November HIV/AIDS Surveillance Surveillance overview HIV Incidence Surveillance Second Surveillance Stakeholder.
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Preparedness for Biological Emergencies 27 April 2004 Jeffrey S. Duchin, M.D. Chief, Communicable Disease.
Hospital Outreach Unit: Local public health and HAIs Dawn Terashita MD, MPH Acute Communicable Disease Control Los Angeles County Department of Public.
Shigellosis Bacterial dysentery. Microbial Agent Four species of Shigella: –boydii –dysenteriae (causes deadly epidemics) –flexneri (1/3 of U.S.) –sonnei.
1 Novel Influenza A H1N1 Outbreak: The Florida Response Epidemiology Perspective: Situation Update.
Module I Managing Case Information: Creating a Line Listing.
1 Using ESSENCE-FL and a serosurvey to estimate total influenza infections, 2009 Richard S. Hopkins, MD, MSPH Kate Goodin, MPH Mackenzie Weise, MPH Aaron.
Outbreak Investigation. Objectives  Determine if an outbreak is occurring  Characterise the outbreak  Identify additional cases  Identify causative.
Recent Epidemiologic Situations of TB in Myanmar -Preliminary Review of Data from routine TB surveillance focusing on Case Finding- 9 May 2014, Nay Pyi.
CIFOR Council to Improve Foodborne Outbreak Response CIFOR Guidelines and CIFOR Toolkit Donald J. Sharp, MD, DTM&H Food Safety Office National Center for.
National Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care June 15, 2011 Kana Enomoto Director Office of Policy, Planning, and Innovation.
Liberia Field Epidemiology Training Programme (LFETP)Liberia Field Epidemiology Training Programme LFETP) FIELD WORK 2 -Expanded Surveillance Report- -Measles.
HEPATITIS A EISENMAN ARIE, M.D Department of Internal Medicine B Rambam Medical Center Haifa, Israel
Evaluation of the New Jersey Silicosis Surveillance System, Jessie Gleason, MSPH CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellow New Jersey Department of.
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Preparedness for Biological Emergencies 27 April 2004 Jeffrey S. Duchin, M.D. Chief, Communicable Disease.
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Preparedness for Biological Emergencies 27 April 2004 Jeffrey S. Duchin, M.D. Chief, Communicable Disease.
Current Pandemic H1N1 Updates in the Philippines Department of Health, Philippines Juan M. Lopez, MD, PGradDipPH, MPH Aldrin Q. Reyes, RN.
Epi Program Overview Disease Surveillance and Reporting.
Correlation of National Influenza Surveillance Data to the Local Experience Kate Goodin, MPH Florida Department of Health Bureau of Epidemiology 6 th Annual.
Using Surveillance Indicators for Vaccine-Preventable Diseases: National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System Sandra W. Roush, MT, MPH National.
Surveillance: Definition, Goals and Methodology Michael O. Favorov M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc. Deputy Director-General, Director of Translational Research Division,
Outbreak Investigation
Lead Poisoning Cases Identified
Strategies to Reduce Antibiotic Resistance and to Improve Infection Control Robin Oliver, M.D., CPE.
CIFOR Guidelines for Foodborne Disease Outbreak Response and the CIFOR Toolkit: Focus Area 5: Pathogen-Specific Surveillance New York Integrated Center.
This is an archived document.
Maria del Rosario, MD, MPH Arianna DeBarr, RN, BSN
Giardiasis.
Diagnosed Food Handlers
Outbreak Investigation
Introduction to public health surveillance
Gastro- intestinal diseases
Using Whole Genome Sequencing Analysis in California
You Asked: Haemophilus and AFM
National Immunization Conference
Presentation transcript:

PRIORITIZING INVESTIGATIONS OF REPORTED CASES OF SELECTED ENTERIC INFECTIONS Richard S. Hopkins, MD, MSPH Leah Eisenstein, MPH CSTE annual meeting, Omaha, NE, June, 2012

Background Florida consistently has the highest number, and one of the highest rates, of salmonellosis cases reported among the states In 2010, there were: 1211 cases of campylobacteriosis 408 cases of cryptosporidiosis 2,139 cases of giardiasis 6,281 cases of salmonellosis 1,212 cases of shigellosis Peak numbers in last ten years: Campylobacteriosis 1211, cryptosporidiosis 738, giardiasis 2,139, salmonellosis 6,741, shigellosis 2,845 We serotype fewer than 10% of Salmonella isolates and about 20% of them get a PFGE pattern This analysis is not about typhoid fever or shigatoxin-producing E. coli

Background Our standard approach has been that every reported case of each of these infections should be interviewed Conversations with county health department (CHD) epidemiology staff indicated some lack of clarity as to the purpose of interviews Epi staff got considerable satisfaction from educating people with cases about how they might have gotten infected and how they could prevent future illnesses in themselves. CHD staff were spending a lot of time on follow-up testing of cases in sensitive situations to clear them to return

Reality bites Florida CHDs are getting squeezed financially By their county commissioners By the state health department/legislature By Medicaid CHD directors are gradually reducing the size of their general epidemiology staffs, and adding duties to those who remain Florida DOH supports 79 general epidemiology FTEs in CHDs with federal preparedness funds In some CHDs these are now the majority of epi staff

Rethinking enteric case investigations In late 2011, the Epidemiology Bureau started a conversation with CHD staff and state-level foodborne investigation staff Enteric workgroup Quality improvement workgroup Started with a high-level principles document Then some data analysis Finally a set of priority recommendations for CHD prioritization of enteric investigations Separately, we are semi-automating the process for creating cases of salmonellosis in Merlin from electronic laboratory reports (J Hamilton presentation)

Preparedness implications At the same time we were operationalizing the PHEP performance measure about ‘time from receipt of case report to initiation of control measures’ for the six priority PHEP diseases We had decided to add salmonellosis and shigellosis to the PHEP diseases as we built the capacity to capture the information needed for this performance measure Whether interviewed Whether investigated Whether certain control measures were taken, and when

High-level principles document (August 2011) Key assumption 1: for these enteric infections, people are most infectious to others while they are ill with diarrhea To a first approximation, one’s infectiousness to others should be a function of the number of opportunities to soil one’s hands Some people shed organisms in stool for days to weeks after they recover from their clinical illness, but generally the concentration is lower Key assumption 2: we don’t know about most of the people with these infections (estimated 2% for salmonellosis)

Purposes of surveillance for these organisms To detect individual cases in such a way that public health, medical, or behavioral action can prevent spread from the reported case To detect outbreaks of illnesses due to these agents, early enough to make a difference to the course of the outbreak To allow a better understanding of the descriptive epidemiology of cases to be able to focus primary case prevention efforts, and formulate better prevention strategies To detect outbreaks of illnesses due to these agents to understand better the events that lead to outbreaks and thus be able to focus outbreak prevention efforts

When can interventions make a difference over one or two incubation periods? A case is identified while the person is still ill and presumed infectious, and thus interventions may prevent cases A case is identified after illness has resolved, but while the person was recently infectious and is still potentially infectious. Interventions may still be useful, especially behavior change by infected contacts, and prophylactic treatment of contacts A common source outbreak is detected early enough that the source of the outbreak can be removed, changing the course of the outbreak An outbreak that started as a common source outbreak is detected early enough that there is still an opportunity to influence the number of cases spread from person to person

When can investigations make a longer- term difference? Even if an outbreak is detected after the common source is gone There is value in learning how the outbreak occurred, so that steps can be taken to prevent recurrences, and to help guide public health policy (e.g., in relation to regulation, standards, or inspections)

Key time parameters Usual duration of illness was taken from CCDM, picking a number toward the upper end of the usual range From existing Merlin data, we pulled median time intervals by disease for Case onset to case report to CHD Diagnosis to case report to CHD Specimen collection to case report to CHD Lab report to case report to CHD

Reading the table Agent Usual duration of illness (in days) # of days from onset date # of days from diagnosis date # of days from specimen collection date # of days from lab report date Campylobacter species Cryptosporidium parvum Giardia lamblia Salmonella species66141 Shigella species If a case report of salmonellosis is received 3 days from specimen collection date, the person is likely still ill. If a case report of campylobacteriosis is received 7 days from onset date, the person is likely not still ill.

Our recommended priorities for interview and investigation Group 1: people whose initial case report indicates they are in a sensitive situation or part of an outbreak. Group 2: people whose case report is received within the time frames in the table Group 3: all others This was conveyed to CHDs March, 2012

Possible drawbacks Some outbreaks may come to light only as a consequence of interviewing cases reported one by one, and we might miss outbreaks. This isn’t the most common way we detect outbreaks If the cases are interviewed late, the outbreak may have come to light anyway, or ended Some people who are in sensitive situations will be missed if they are in group 2 and are not interviewed, and we will not be able to keep them out and clear them to return. If their diarrhea has already resolved, the opportunities for prevention in the sensitive setting are less Most infectious cases are not detected and reported anyway We will miss opportunities for education and for generating good-will.

Let’s look at some data Cases reported in CY 2011 Only confirmed cases 10,816 cases of 5 diseases 9,028 interviewed (83%) From September 1 to December 31, 2011, 18% of interviewed cases were interviewed within recommended timeframe (“timely”) Range from 10% for salmonellosis to 54% for cryptosporidiosis

Number of confirmed cases > 18 y.o., proportion where interview would have been recommended*, and reduction in interviews, FL, CY 2011 # of confirmed cases # of confirmed cases actually interviewed # of cases with interview recommende d* Theoretical reduction in # of interviews Campy Crypto (3) Giardiasis Salmonellosis Shigellosis (3) Total * Based on earliest lab date

Number of confirmed cases < 18 y.o., proportion where interview would have been recommended*, and reduction in interviews, FL, CY 2011 # of confirmed cases # of confirmed cases actually interviewed # of cases with interview recommende d* Theoretical reduction in # of interviews Campy Crypto Giardiasis Salmonellosis3,2962, ,250 Shigellosis1,6221,4031,444(41) Total6,0815,2702,3712,899 * Based on earliest lab date

Timeliness of interview and diarrhea, for confirmed cases of all five diseases, FL, March 15 – June 1, 2012 Confirmed, interviewed 2011 cases Symptomatic at interview Total interviewedPercent Interviewed timely % Interviewed late % Interviewing no-one in Group 3 (late reports) would result in missing about 60% of people with diarrhea at time of interview. The difference in % with diarrhea by timely interview or not is in the wrong direction for giardiasis. We may have underestimated duration of diarrhea in giardiasis. People recovering from giardiasis can have prolonged diarrhea even after the organism is eradicated. 32% of interviews timely is increased from 18% in late 2011

Separating giardiasis from the other four diseases, March 15 - June 1, 2012 Other four diseases Symptomatic at interview Total interviewed Percent Interviewed timely % Interviewed late % GiardiasisSymptomatic at interview Total interviewed Percent Interviewed timely % Interviewed late %

Impact on sensitive situations March 15 – June 2, 2012 Overall 883 adult cases reported, of whom 703 (80%) interviewed Food handlers: 10 interviewed timely, 9 late 5 symptomatic interviewed timely, 2 late Healthcare workers 6 interviewed timely, 17 late 5 symptomatic interviewed timely, 4 late Child care workers 4 interviewed timely, 5 late 2 symptomatic interviewed timely, 5 late Among 980 cases in children under age 18, for children in child care: 70 interviewed early, 118 late 23 symptomatic interviewed timely, 38 late

What are CHDs doing with our recommended priorities? Survey of CHDs in late April: 29 out of 40 CHDs were adopting the prioritization Many said they would use the priority list to do only very brief interviews with those in Group 3 % reported as interviewed down from 84% Sept – Dec 2011 (before recommendations made) to 82% March 15 – June 1, % of interviews that are timely has gone up from 18% to 32% % of people symptomatic at time of interview has gone up from 37% to 42%

Costs and benefits Following this approach could reduce annual number of interviews completed by over 5000 We would not interview over half of the people who still had diarrhea at the time of interview We would not identify about half of the adults in sensitive situations who still had diarrhea at time of interview We would not identify 38% of children in child care who still had diarrhea at time of interview CHDs are being more selective about whom they interview (more are timely, more are symptomatic)