Title: OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION
1OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION
2Definition
- Occurrence of more cases of disease than expected
- Nosocomial outbreak-any group of illnesses of
common etiology occurring in patients of a
medical care facility acquired by exposure of
those patients to the disease agent while
confined in such a facility.
3Reasons to investigate
- Control/prevention
- Research opportunities
- Training
- Public, political, or legal concerns
- Program considerations
4Control/prevention
- Where are we in the outbreak?
- Goals will be different depending on answer(s)
- Cases continuing to occur
- Goal prevent further cases
- Assess population at risk, implement control
measures - Outbreak appears to be coming to an end
- Goal prevent future outbreaks
- Identify factors contributing to outbreak,
implement measures to prevent similar events in
the future
5Research opportunities
- Gain additional knowledge
- Opportunity to study natural history of the
disease - Newly recognized disease
- Define natural history
- Characterize the population at risk
- Well recognized diseases
- Assess impact of control measures
- Usefulness of new epidemiology and laboratory
techniques
6 Training
- Requirements of an epidemiologist!
- Diplomacy
- Logical thinking
- Problem solving ability and quantitative skills
- Epidemiologic know-how
- Judgment
- Pair a new epidemiologist with an experienced
epidemiologist
7Public, political, or legal concerns
- Sometimes override scientific concerns
- Health department needs to be responsible and
responsive to public concerns - Even if the concern has little scientific basis
8Program considerations
- Outbreak of disease targeted by a public health
program - Reveal a weakness and opportunity to change or
strengthen the program - Identify population that may have been overlooked
- Failure of intervention strategy
- Changes in the agent
- Events beyond scope of the program
9Steps of an Outbreak Investigation
101. Preparation
- Investigation
- Scientific knowledge
- Review literature
- Consult experts
- Sample questionnaires
- Supplies
- Consult with laboratory
- Equipment
- Laptop, camera etc.
11Preparation cont.
- Administration-assure personnel resources,
funding - Travel arrangements (orders)
- Approval
- Personal matters
- Consultation-make sure you know your role and its
parameters - Lead investigator or just lending a hand?
- Know who to contact when you arrive
122. Establish existence of an outbreak
- Is an outbreak truly occurring?
- True outbreak
- Sporadic and unrelated cases of same disease
- Unrelated cases of similar unrelated disease
- Determine the expected number of cases before
deciding whether the observed number exceeds the
expected number
13Establish existence of an outbreak cont.
- Comparing observed with expected
- through surveillance records for notifiable
diseases - hospital discharge data, registries, mortality
statistics - data from other facilities, states, surveys of
health care providers - community survey
143. Verify the Diagnosis
- Ensure proper diagnosis and rule out lab error as
the bias for increased diagnosis - Review clinical findings, lab results
- Summarize clinical findings with frequency
distributions - Characterize spectrum of disease
- Verify diagnosis
- Develop case definition
15Verify the Diagnosis cont.
- See and talk with patients if at all possible
- Better understand clinical features
- Mental image of disease and the patients affected
- Gather critical information
- Source of exposure
- What they think caused illness
- Knowledge of others with similar illness
- Common denominators
- Helpful in generating ideas for hypothesis about
etiology and spread
164a. Establish a case definition
- Case definition
- Standard set of criteria for deciding whether an
individual should be classified as having the
health condition of interest - Includes clinical criteria and restrictions by
time, place and person - Must be applied consistently and without bias to
all persons under investigation - Must not contain an exposure of risk factor you
want to test
174a. Establish a case definition cont.
- Classification
- Definite (confirmed)
- Laboratory confirmed
- Probable
- Typical clinical features without lab
confirmation - Possible (suspected)
- Fewer of the typical clinical features
184a. Establish a case definition cont.
- Early in investigation may use a loose case
definition - Better to collect more than necessary so you
dont need to make repeat visits - Identify extent of problem and population
affected - Generating hypotheses
- Later when hypotheses are sharpened investigator
may tighten case definition
194b. Identify and count cases
- Target health care facilities where diagnosis
likely to be made - Enhanced passive surveillance e.g. letter
describing situation and asking for reports - Active surveillance e.g. phone or visit facility
to collect information - Alerting the public
- Media alert to avoid contaminated food product
and seek medical attention if symptoms arise
204b. Identify and count cases cont.
- OB population restricted and large proportion of
cases are unlikely to be diagnosed e.g. on a
cruise ship - Survey entire population
- Always ask case-patients if they know of any
others ill with the same symptoms
214b. Identify and count cases cont.
- Information to be collected about every case
- Identifying information
- Re-contact if additional questions come up
- Notification of lab results and outcomes of
investigation - Check for duplicate records
- Map geographic extent
- Demographics
- Provide person characteristics for defining
population at risk
224b. Identify and count cases cont.
- Information to be collected about every case
cont. - Clinical findings
- Verify case definition met
- Chart time course
- Supplemental date e.g. deaths
- Risk factor information
- Tailored to specific disease in question
- Reporter information
- Id of person making report
234b. Identify and count cases cont.
- Collection forms
- Standard case report form
- Questionnaire
- Data abstraction form
- Line listing
- Abstraction of selected critical items from above
forms - Contains key information
245. Perform Descriptive Epidemiology
- After collection of data characterize the
outbreak by - Time
- Place
- Person
25Time
- Epidemic curve
- Histogram of the number of cases by their date of
onset - Visual display of the outbreaks magnitude and
time trend - Where you are in the time course of the outbreak
- Future course?
- Probable time period of exposure
- Helps in development of questionnaire focusing on
that time period - Common source vs. Propagated
26Place
- Geographic extent of problem
- Clusters or patterns providing important
etiologic clues - Spot maps
- Where cases live, work or may have been exposed
27Person
- Determine what population at risk
- Usually define population by host characteristics
or exposure - Use rates to identify high-risk groups
- Numerator number of case
- Denominator number of people at risk
28Develop Hypotheses
- Hypotheses should address
- Source of the agent
- Mode of transmission
- Vector or vehicle
- Exposure that caused disease
29Develop Hypotheses
- Generating the hypothesis
- What do you know about the disease?
- Reservoir, transmission, common vehicles and
known risk factors - Talk to several case-patients
- Use open ended questions
- Ask lots of questions
- Talk to local health department staff
- Use descriptive epidemiology e.g. epi curve
307. Test Hypotheses
- Evaluate the credibility of your hypotheses
- Compare with established facts
- When clinical, lab, environmental and/or epi data
undoubtedly support hypothesis - Use analytic epidemiology to quantify
relationships and explore the role of chance - Cohort studies
- Case control studies
317. Test Hypotheses cont.
- Cohort
- Small, well defined population
- Contact each attendee and ask a series of
questions - Ill Vs not ill
- Look for source exposure
- Attack rate is high among those exposed
- Attack rate is low among those not exposed
- Most of the cases were exposed, so that the
exposure could explain most, if not all, of the
cases - Relative risk measure of association between
exposure and disease
327. Test Hypotheses cont.
- Case-control
- Population not well defined
- Case patients and comparison group (controls)
questioned about exposure(s) - Compute measure of association Odds Ratio
- Quantify relationship between exposure and
disease
338. Refine hypotheses and do additional studies
- Epidemiologic
- When analytical epi unrevealing need to
reconsider your hypotheses - Go back and gather more information
- Conduct different studies
- Laboratory
- Additional tests
- Environmental studies
349. Implement Control /Prevention Measures
- Implement control measures as soon as possible
- May be aimed at agent, source, or reservoir
- Short or long term
3510. Communicate the Findings
- Orally within facility/community
- Local health authorities and persons responsible
for implementation of control and prevention
measures - Written reports (consider publication) for
planning, record of performance, legal issues,
reference, adding to knowledge base