Objective A CPSP Survey on Canadian Paediatricians’ Experience and Knowledge about the Risks of Infectious Diseases in Children Adopted Internationally.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tuberculosis Control in Substance Abuse Treatment Centers
Advertisements

Improving diagnosis TB laboratory strengthening.
1 Measles in Fraser Health Michelle Murti, MHO Fraser Health Authority, BC CPHA May 27, 2014.
Increased routine screening for syphilis and falling syphilis incidence in HIV positive and HIV negative men who have sex with men: implications for syphilis.
Tuberculosis in Children: Prevention Module 10C - March 2010.
Presentation to the National RAP Conference Chris Friesen, Director Immigrant Services Society of BC Dr. Kerry Telford, Physician Leader Bridge Community.
Case Identification for the Missouri Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program Libby Landrum, RN, MSN Viral Hepatitis Prevention Manager Bureau HIV, STD,
Counting Chronic Hepatitis B cases in York Region: Denis Heng York Region Community and Health Services APHEO Conference - “Explaining the Miracle: Statistics.
Texas Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention Program 2 nd Bi-Annual State Conference Designing an Effective Case Management Program Lisa Jacques-Carroll, MSW.
Perinatal Hepatitis B Prevention
THE OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PROGRAM FOR ANIMAL RELATED ACTIVITIES KATHRYN WIENS – INTERIM OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PROGRAM ADMINISTRATOR.
HIV in the United Kingdom: 2013 HIV and AIDS Reporting Section Centre for Infectious Disease Surveillance and Control (CIDSC) Public Health England London,
Sask BCG Discontinuation Dr. Ibrahim Khan Saskatchewan TB Education Day 28 th October, 2011.
Systematic TB Screening: Philippine Experience The 9th Technical Advisory Group and National TB Program Mangers meeting for TB control in the Western Pacific.
Prevention and control of Hepatitis B In Central and Eastern Europe and Newly Independent States WHO/EURO.
Staff Health Care Infectious Disease view Jameel Adnan, MD. Community & Primary Health Care KAAU- RABEG BRANCH.
BCG complications.
Kelley Bemis Use of automated testing in syphilis diagnosis and its impact on surveillance – Connecticut, 2010 CDC/CSTE Applied Epidemiology Fellowship.
This is a global infectious disease.
How to Measure Quality of Care in Family Practice Using Administrative Data Alan Katz, Ruth-Ann Soodeen, Bogdan Bogdanovic, Carolyn De Coster, and Dan.
HealthSanté CanadaCanada Influenza Prevention and Control in Canada Arlene King, MD, MHSc, FRCPC Director, Immunization and Respiratory Infections Division,
1 Meeting with Contacts for TB Assessment. Learning Objectives After this session, participants will be able to: 1.Explain why contact assessments are.
Routine HIV Screening in Health Care Settings David Spach, MD Clinical Director Northwest AIDS Education and Training Center Professor of Medicine, Division.
© 2014 Canadian Paediatric Society I Identifying & screening for newcomers’ unique needs © 2014 Canadian Paediatric Society I
RESULTS INTRODUCTION Laurentian_University.svgLaurentian_University.svg‎ (SVG file, nominally 500 × 87 pixels, file size: 57 KB) Screening for Developmental.
Healthy Kansans living in safe and sustainable environments.
Seroprevalence of HBV and HCV among Children in the Kilimanjaro Region, Tanzania Florida J. Muro, Suzanne P. Fiorillo, Christopher Odhiambo, Coleen K.
Hepatitis B Virus 28.
Rangel PDSA TB Didactic TB or not TB?. AIM Statement In order to improve care at the Charles Rangel Clinic, we will implement a tuberculosis screening.
Early Parental Satisfaction with Pediatric Care: Does it Improve Immunization of Young Children? Ashley Schempf BS, Cynthia Minkovitz MD MPP Donna Strobino.
Application in professional activity of theoretical knowledge and practical skills acquired during residency program Dr. Ion Bîrcă National Center of Public.
Components of HIV/AIDS Case Surveillance: Case Report Forms and Sources.
The Impact of Introducing “Express Visits” for Asymptomatic Persons Seeking STD Services in a Busy Urban STD Clinic System, Borrelli J 1, Paneth-Pollak.
TB/HIV management survey  Baseline audit in parallel with guidelines development process  Survey of clinician opinion and practice  Data collection.
1 HPV Vaccine Extended Dosing Schedule for Grade 6 September 2010.
Evaluation of the AETC HIV Testing Initiative. Background In 2006, revised recommendations for routine HIV screening were released. AETCs have worked.
1 HPV Vaccine Extended Dosing Schedule for Grade 6 September 2010 Revised December 2010.
Health Organization The Challenges Facing Tuberculosis Control Blantyre Hospital, Malawi: TB Division, 3 patients per bed.
1 HPV Vaccine Extended Dosing Schedule for Grade 6 September 2010 Revised December 2010.
Cape Town 17/07/09 Provider Initiated HIV Screening for Children Attending Nutritional Ward in KTH Operations research proposal Presented by Tamadur Elnour.
CDC Guidelines for Use of QuantiFERON ® -TB Gold Test Philip LoBue, MD Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of Tuberculosis Elimination.
Mr. C’s Joke/Riddle of the Day. The Role Canada is Playing How the World Keeps Diseases from Spreading Pt.2.
Immunisation overview ST1 Sept 09 Dr Ulla Trend. The two public health interventions with the greatest impact are clean water and immunisation (World.
Sexual Health Gains and key issues 1.Rates of teenage pregnancy have fallen in BW 2.New satellite CASH services have been commissioned 3.Abortion services.
Indicators in Malaria Program Phases By Bayo S Fatunmbi [Technical Officer, Monitoring & Evaluation] ERAR-GMS, WHO Cambodia & Dr. Michael Lynch Epidemiologist.
Indicators in Malaria Program Phases By Bayo S Fatunmbi [Technical Officer, Monitoring & Evaluation] ERAR-GMS, WHO Cambodia.
Blood Tests (“Labs”) 1. “Labs” Regular blood tests are a crucial part of HIV health care. They are often referred to as “bloods” or “labs” Several important.
What are the health benefits and risks associated with vaccinating your child and why is it so important ?
Viral Hepatitis Program Management of Babies Born to HBsAg- Positive Mothers Vickie Weeast Perinatal Hepatitis B Case.
Focus Area 25 Sexually Transmitted Diseases Progress Review July 21, 2004.
Co-infections of Hepatitis C or Tuberculosis Among Persons Living with HIV in The Florida Cohort Project Alexander Zirulnik MPH, Chukwuemeka Okafor MPH,
Evaluation of Hepatitis B surveillance system in Armenia, 2014 AUTHORS Karine Gevorgyan Lusine Paronyan Shushan Sargsyan Artavazd Vanyan NCDC, Armenia.
BCG Vaccination Dr Lika Nehaul. Acknowledgements Nature (Scientific) Publishing Group Health Protection Agency World Health Organisation.
Serologic markers and molecular epidemiology of HBV from an HIV infected cohort from Cameroon Tshifhiwa Magoro 1, Emmaculate Nongpang 2, Lufuno Mavhandu.
WHO Growth Chart Self-Instructional Training Package Meeting the Training Needs of Primary Care & Public Health Practitioners.
Hepatitis B screening and vaccination for Slovak Roma population in Sheffield. Age >16 1/Start standard schedule of hepatitis B vaccination if history.
The Rise of Medical and Religious Exemptions to Vaccination in Texas National Immunization Conference May 12, 2004 Julie Townsend Monica Gamez.
Prevention of Perinatal and Childhood Hepatitis B Virus Infections Background on Where We’ve Been Lisa Jacques-Carroll, MSW Immunization Services Division,
Check Your Risk: Increasing School-Based STI Screening Participation Among District of Columbia High School Students Michelle Jasczyński, Ed.M. Public.
University of Michigan Health System Primary Care Providers’ Perspectives on a Registry-Based Indicator to Identify High-Risk Children for Influenza Vaccination.
TB Disease and Infection
Bloodborne viral and sexually transmissible infections in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: Annual Surveillance Report 2016.
or Public Health-Seattle & King County Implementation of a Mandatory Reporting Requirement in King County Linda Vrtis,
Downtown Community Health Centre
CDC Guidelines for Use of QuantiFERON®-TB Gold Test
Monitoring the implementation of the TB Action Plan for the WHO European Region, 2016–2020 EU/EEA situation in 2016 ECDC Tuberculosis Programme European.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم.
RISK R isk of Perinatal and Early Childhood Infection
AIDS 2018 | Abstract No. TUPDC0102 | Tuesday July 24, 2018
In Canada, the rates of hepatitis B infection are low (less than 0.5%).  During the past four decades most Canadian immigrants have come from countries.
Presentation transcript:

Objective A CPSP Survey on Canadian Paediatricians’ Experience and Knowledge about the Risks of Infectious Diseases in Children Adopted Internationally ML Lawson 1, L Auger 2, C Baxter 3, JF Chicoine 4, TJ Clifford 1, S Kahaler 5, R Kugelmass 6, S Kuhn 7, M Naus 8, A Simone 9, C Hui 1 # Confirmed Cases* Hepatitis B30 Hepatitis C4 HIV3 Syphilis4 TB Infection111 Methods Background Materials & Methods Discussion Investigators’ Affiliation 1 Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario; 2 Montreal Children’s Hospital; 3 Royal Alexandra Hospital, Edmonton; 4 CHU Sainte- Justine, Montreal; 5 Vancouver; 6 Montreal; 7 Calgary; 8 BC Centre for Disease Control; 9 Trillium Health Centre, Mississauga To determine the experience of Canadian paediatricians with children adopted internationally and their knowledge about current recommendations for screening for infectious diseases. Canadian families have been adopting children internationally at increasing rates over the last 10 years with over 2000 international adoptions annually. Most of these children come from countries and/or social situations with increased risks for specific infectious diseases acquired at birth or in the first years of life and where routine immunization is incomplete or inadequate. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the CPSP Staff and the participating paediatricians from across Canada. In September 2005, a one-time survey on international adoption was sent to the 2500 participants of the Canadian Paediatric Surveillance Program (CPSP) to determine the following: Whether Canadian paediatricians had experience with caring for children adopted internationally, Whether they had screened these children for specific high-risk infectious diseases and if they had, the number of confirmed cases they had seen, Their knowledge about the method of screening for these disease, including method and timing of testing, and Their knowledge and experience with evaluating immunization records of children adopted internationally and whether revaccination was indicated. Limitations of Survey The majority of Canadian paediatricians are seeing children who were adopted internationally. Their practice and knowledge about screening for high-risk infectious diseases is suboptimal as is their knowledge about how to determine who needs revaccination. These gaps in knowledge and practice may be leading to under- detection of conditions such as HIV, hepatitis B and C and inadequate immunization putting these children and their contacts at risk. AAP recommendations are largely consensus based. Further research is required to develop evidence-based recommendations for children adopted internationally and to determine their risk for specific infectious diseases. Results 672 CPSP participants responded (27%) Analyses were restricted to the 403 respondents (60%) who had seen an internationally adopted (IA) child within the previous 2 years. Respondents’ Knowledge About Screening for Infectious Diseases in IA Children Qn: How many internationally adopted (IA) children have you seen over the past 2 years? < 5 > Only 27% of CPSP participants responded but this is consistent with the response rate to other one-time CPSP surveys. Survey was unable to distinguish between primary care/consulting paediatricians and paediatric subspecialists. The number of confirmed cases is likely underestimated as the survey did not include family physicians, however the survey method could not exclude duplicate reporting. The incidence for these infectious diseases could not be calculated because denominator data was not available AAP Red Book Recommendations CPSP Survey Respondents Hepatitis B Screen all IA children HBsAg, HBsAb, HBcAb on arrival Consider retesting in 6 months 79% would screen all IA children on arrival only 25% would include HBcAb 25% would retest Hepatitis C Screen IA children from specific high-risk countries HCVAb on arrival Retesting not required 71% would screen all IA children on arrival 21% would retest HIV Screen all IA children HIV Elisa or PCR on arrival Consider retesting in 6 months 73% would screen all IA children on arrival 37% would retest Syphilis All IA children VDRL, RPR, ART or MHA-TP, FTA-ABS on arrival 67% would screen all IA children on arrival TB Screen all IA children PPD within 3 months of arrival (+ CXR if symptomatic or PPD +ve) If PPD negative & child is malnourished, consider repeat PPD in 2-3 months PPD is indicated even if child had previous BCG 71% would screen all IA children on arrival 95% would screen with PPD; 37% also do CXR 35% would retest 35% would not do PPD if child had received BCG Revaccination of IA children whose adoption records showed previous vaccination 77% sometimes, 17% always, 6% never Factors affecting respondents’ decision to revaccinate: 86% would examine quality of records 66% would consider child’s country of origin 46% would consider child’s age 34% would consider overall state of child’s health 25% would do serologic testing Respondents’ Knowledge About Revaccination of IA Children who were Previously Vaccinated *total # cases seen by all respondents over previous 2 years