Title: Event Detection in a Vulnerable Population
1Event Detection in a Vulnerable Population
- Erin L. Murray, MSPH
- Georgia Division of Public Health
- Robert J. Finton, MSPH
- Fulton County Department of Health Wellness
2Background Atlanta Homeless Services
- Several homeless shelters operated throughout
city with variety of services - Day services
- Meals
- Mail collection
- Medical clinics
- Overnight shelter accommodations
- Atlanta homeless also utilize emergency
departments in Fulton County
3Background Active Surveillance in GA Hospitals
- Emerging Infections Program (EIP)
- gt100 clinical laboratories
- Syndromic Surveillance
- 29 Georgia Emergency Departments (ED)
4Background Emerging Infections Program (EIP)
- Network of CDC and 11 state health departments
- Conduct active population-based surveillance
- Active Bacterial Core Surveillance (ABCs)
- Invasive diseases caused by emerging,
vaccine-preventable, and drug-resistant bacterial
diseases - FoodNet
- Foodborne and waterborne diseases
5Background Syndromic Surveillance in GA
- 22 emergency departments enrolled in March 2007
- 2 in Fulton County
- Data received daily for previous 24 hour period
(midnight to midnight) - Chief complaints categorized into 26 non-mutually
exclusive syndromes - 4 Priority Syndromes
- Fever Flu
- Rash Fever
- Diarrhea
- Vomit
- 22 Secondary Syndromes
- Notifiable Diseases
- Bioterrorist Agents
- Non-infectious conditions
6Background Syndromic Surveillance in GA
- Data analyzed using CuSum (EARS) 3 levels
- State
- Health District
- Hospital
- Districts responsible for
monitoring their hospitals - State takes secondary role
- Multi-District anomalies
- Within District anomalies
7Background Syndromic Surveillance in GA
- Results available daily via Syndromic
Surveillance secure web interface - Counts
- Line list
- Time series
- Demographic distributions
- Interactive map
8The Event Bloody Respiratory Syndrome
- March 12, 2007
- C1C2C3 flags identified
- 8 total events statewide on March 11
- 6 at Hospital A
- Most visits on single day at single ED ever
9Bloody Respiratory SyndromeMarch 12
- All had similar chief complaint
- 2 from same zip code
- Fulton County Department of Health Wellness
(FCDHW) immediately notified
10Bloody Respiratory SyndromeMarch 12
- FCDHW contacted Infection Control Practitioner
(ICP) at Hospital A - Two from same zip code reported same address
- Day shelter for homeless
- Both discharged as rule out tuberculosis
- One returned and was admitted
11Bloody Respiratory SyndromeMarch 13
- Culture results available
- Both positive for Streptococcus pneumoniae
(non-sterile sites) - ICP contacted GA EIP to inquire about possibility
of other cases - 4 cases of invasive S. pneumoniae with same day
shelter address reported - Onset from late-February and mid-March, 2007
12Invasive S. pneumoniae
- Notified CDC of cluster of invasive S. pneumoniae
among homeless - Review of all Atlanta invasive S. pneumoniae
cases in 2007 (Jan-Mar) - 10 cases with addresses reported as known
homeless shelters
13Invasive S. pneumoniae
- All hospitalized
- 8 at Hospital A
- 2 at Hospital B
- 7 had HIV
- 2 deaths
- 6 isolates with known serotypes
- 5 different S. pneumoniae serotypes
- No person-to-person transmission of S. pneumoniae
14Invasive S. pneumoniae in Homeless
15Invasive S. pneumoniae in Homeless
16The Investigation
- Hypothesis
- Invasive S. pneumoniae infections represent
secondary infection from viral primary infection - Possibly influenza
- March 16 formal investigation initiated
- Fulton County Department of Health Wellness
- Georgia Division of Public Health
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Georgia Emerging Infections Program
- Service Provider A
17Investigation Objectives
- Determine if significant increase in invasive S.
pneumoniae occurred among homeless during 2006-07
influenza season - Determine if influenza or another viral
antecedent was circulating among homeless - Recommend interventions to interrupt transmission
of agents involved
18Methods S. pneumoniae Surveillance
- Focus on inpatients
- Most homeless persons with community acquired
pneumonia are hospitalized - Prospective
- Included respiratory virus testing
- March 17-30 - surveillance at hospital A
- March 22-30 - surveillance at hospital B
- Retrospective
- October 1, 2006 - March 16, 2007
19Methods Influenza-like Illness (ILI)
Surveillance
- Outpatient clinics of Service Organization A
- Prospective
- March 21-30, 2007
- Respiratory virus testing
- Any respiratory symptoms, e.g., cough, sore
throat, etc. - Retrospective
- November 1, 2006 - March 20, 2007
- ILI visits
- Acute respiratory infections (ICD-9 codes
460.0466.19) - Pneumonia and influenza (ICD-9 codes 480.0487.1)
20Results Prospective and Retrospective S.
pneumoniae Surveillance
- 23 cases of invasive S. pneumoniae identified in
homeless persons - 1 new case from prospective surveillance
- No laboratory evidence of coincident viral
respiratory infection - 16 had HIV/AIDS
21Results Prospective and Retrospective
Outpatient Surveillance
- 10-20 of visits due to ILI
- Sentinel Providers (2-5)
- Laboratory Results
- 1 influenza B virus
- 3 coronavirus
- 1 also positive for rhinovirus
22Investigation Limitations
- Prospective surveillance lt2 weeks
- Investigation began when influenza season ending
- Only 1 new invasive S. pneumoniae case detected
- Only 1 influenza isolate identified
23Investigation Findings
- Previously unrecognized burden of invasive S.
pneumoniae in homeless - Contribution of specific viral antecedent cases
S. pneumoniae not established - High burden of respiratory illness in homeless
population
24Investigation Recommendations
- Continue prospective surveillance for invasive S.
pneumoniae among homeless - Promote hand-hygiene among homeless
- Consider providing pneumococcal vaccine to
HIV-positive homeless persons - Provide influenza vaccine to entire homeless
community
25Investigation Benefits
- Fostered multi-jurisdictional and multi-agency
collaboration - Provided immediate evaluation of the health
status of many registered homeless - Refined how providers work together to expand
public health services to homeless
26Investigation Benefits
- Expanded relationship between public health and
homeless service providers - Increased notifiable disease reporting from
homeless health care providers - Allows for planning of future health promotion
efforts in this population
27Summary Syndromic Surveillance
- Alerted public health of event in community
- May have otherwise gone unnoticed
- Allowed for immediate response
- Allowed for development of public health
prevention strategies for homeless - Example of how GA using syndromic surveillance to
assist local public health
28Acknowledgements
- Fulton County Department of Health Wellness
- Robert J. Finton, MSPH
- Priti Kolhe, MSHA
- Steven R. Katkowsky, MD
- Wayne Ford, MPH
- Jamie Howgate, MPH
- Shamimul Khan, MPH
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Roopal Patel, MD (EIS)
- Scott Epperson, MPH
- Hospital A
- Nancy White, RN, CIC
- Jessica Garcia, MPH
- Service Organization A
- Mae Morgan, MD, MPH
- Georgia Division of Public Health
- Wendy Cameron, MPH
- Petra Wiersma, MD (EIS)
- Katie Arnold, MD, MPH
- Cherie Drenzek, DVM, MPH
- Susan Lance, DVM, MPH
- Karl Soetebier, MPW
- Georgia Emerging Infections Program
- Monica Farley, MD
- Wendy Baughman, MPH
- Hospital B
- Betsy Hackman, RN, CIC
- Connie Bryant, RN, CIC
- Paul Malpie, MD
- Georgia Public Health Laboratory
29(No Transcript)
30Questions?
31Case Definitions
- CAP
- Chest x-ray confirmed Community Acquired
Pneumonia in homeless person admitted to Hospital
A or Hospital B - IPD
- Isolation of S. pneumoniae from a normally
sterile site from a homeless person admitted to
Hospital A and Hospital B
32Methods Respiratory Virus Surveillance
- Inpatient and Outpatient
- Influenza A and B viruses
- Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
- Human metapneumovirus (hMPV)
- Parainfluenza viruses 1,2, and 3 (PIV1-3)
- Adenovirus
- Coronaviruses
- Rhinoviruses
33Results - Prospective and Retrospective S.
pneumoniae Surveillance
34Results Respiratory Disease Surveillance
- 10 and 20 of clinic visits for ILI