An automated, broad-based, near real-time public health surveillance system using presentations to hospital Emergency Departments in New South Wales, Australia
Open Access
- 22 December 2005
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Public Health
- Vol. 5 (1), 141
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-5-141
Abstract
Background: In a climate of concern over bioterrorism threats and emergent diseases, public health authorities are trialling more timely surveillance systems. The 2003 Rugby World Cup (RWC) provided an opportunity to test the viability of a near real-time syndromic surveillance system in metropolitan Sydney, Australia. We describe the development and early results of this largely automated system that used data routinely collected in Emergency Departments (EDs).Methods: Twelve of 49 EDs in the Sydney metropolitan area automatically transmitted surveillance data from their existing information systems to a central database in near real-time. Information captured for each ED visit included patient demographic details, presenting problem and nursing assessment entered as free-text at triage time, physician-assigned provisional diagnosis codes, and status at departure from the ED. Both diagnoses from the EDs and triage text were used to assign syndrome categories. The text information was automatically classified into one or more of 26 syndrome categories using automated "naïve Bayes" text categorisation techniques. Automated processes were used to analyse both diagnosis and free text-based syndrome data and to produce web-based statistical summaries for daily review. An adjusted cumulative sum (cusum) was used to assess the statistical significance of trends.Results: During the RWC the system did not identify any major public health threats associated with the tournament, mass gatherings or the influx of visitors. This was consistent with evidence from other sources, although two known outbreaks were already in progress before the tournament. Limited baseline in early monitoring prevented the system from automatically identifying these ongoing outbreaks. Data capture was invisible to clinical staff in EDs and did not add to their workload.Conclusion: We have demonstrated the feasibility and potential utility of syndromic surveillance using routinely collected data from ED information systems. Key features of our system are its nil impact on clinical staff, and its use of statistical methods to assign syndrome categories based on clinical free text information. The system is ongoing, and has expanded to cover 30 EDs. Results of formal evaluations of both the technical efficiency and the public health impacts of the system will be described subsequently.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparing Aberration Detection Methods with Simulated DataEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2005
- The SARS Commission Interim Report: SARS and Public Health in OntarioBiosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science, 2004
- Syndromic Surveillance in Public Health Practice, New York CityEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2004
- Communicable diseases report, NSW, for October and November 2003New South Wales Public Health Bulletin, 2004
- Automated Syndromic Surveillance for the 2002 Winter OlympicsJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2003
- Watching the Games: public health surveillance for the Sydney 2000 Olympic GamesJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2003
- Naive (Bayes) at forty: The independence assumption in information retrievalLecture Notes in Computer Science, 1998
- Using Laboratory-Based Surveillance Data for Prevention: An Algorithm for Detecting Salmonella OutbreaksEmerging Infectious Diseases, 1997
- The Economic Impact of a Bioterrorist Attack: Are Prevention and Postattack Intervention Programs Justifiable?Emerging Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Counted Data CUSUM'sTechnometrics, 1985