Title: Influenza Surveillance Systems in an International Setting
1Influenza Surveillance Systems in an
International Setting
2Learning Objectives
- Define the surveillance objectives, methods of
hospital selection, and key data collection
priorities for sentinel surveillance for seasonal
influenza and severe respiratory diseases - List appropriate surveillance strategies and
trigger criteria needed for the early detection
of Influenza A(H5N1) in hospitals and communities - List appropriate surveillance strategies and
trigger criteria needed for a broader pandemic
early warning system - Describe how a sentinel site surveillance system
for influenza provides an important support
function for a pandemic early warning system - Identify five ways to enhance human, avian, and
pandemic influenza surveillance activities in
areas where there are known Influenza A(H5N1)
outbreaks in poultry
3Outline
- Introduction to the scenario
- Routine Surveillance for Respiratory Disease and
Seasonal Influenza - Influenza A(H5N1) and Pandemic Early Warning
Surveillance
4Introduction
5Introduction to the Republic of Pegu
- Developing country
- Southeast Asia
- 21 provinces
- Population 50 million
6Geography
Monsoon climate
Bordered by 5 countries
- Population
- 75 rural
- No highway access
Migrants
7Health Care
- Kinds of facilities
- Teaching hospitals
- Specialist hospitals
- Provincial hospitals
- District hospitals
- Local health stations
- Traditional clinics
- 12 traditional medicine hospitals
- Each province
- 16-50 bed hospital
- Each district
- Medical officer, public health, and medicine
8Influenza Laboratory Testing
National Laboratory PCR Diagnosis
Closest WHO Reference Laboratory is in a
neighboring country
Regional Laboratories Serological Diagnosis
No laboratory testing
Provincial Hospital
Traditional Hospital
9Surveillance Infrastructure
- National notifiable disease surveillance system
- Immediate reporting
- Diphtheria
- Cholera
- Yellow fever
- Routine reporting (3 days)
- Standard reporting form
10Part I Routine Surveillance for Respiratory
Disease and Seasonal Influenza
11Question 1
- The main goals of routine (seasonal) influenza
surveillance include all of the following EXCEPT - Describe virus circulation and provide virus
isolates for vaccine development - Provide rapid response to seasonal outbreaks
- Define the epidemiology and patterns of viral
circulation - Provide a support mechanism for pandemic early
warning and monitoring systems - Answer b.
12Question 2
- What surveillance approach might be used to
achieve these goals? - Universal surveillance
- Sentinel site surveillance
- Influenza registry
- Laboratory-based reporting
- Answer b.
- Sentinel site surveillance for
- Hospitalizations due to respiratory disease
- Outpatient visits for influenza-like illness
13Arrival in Pegu
- You are to
- Evaluate the influenza and respiratory disease
surveillance infrastructure - Work with the MOH to develop a protocol to
implement a sustainable national influenza
surveillance system
14The Pegu Deputy Director
- Situation Due to mass poultry die-offs
- Team Chief Surveillance Officer and the Director
of Epidemiology, and you - Develop guidelines for expanding their national
pneumonia and influenza surveillance system - Use money from World Bank to develop pandemic
early warning network
15Current Case Identification
- Clinician initiated pnuemonia and influenza
surveillance among hospitalized patients - Doctors select hospitalized patients
- No case definitions
- Nasopharyngeal and serum specimens submitted to
regional laboratories - Regional laboratories test sera
- National laboratories test high-priority
specimens and confirm positive influenza A
results from regional laboratories
16Current Laboratory Testing
- Regional laboratories test clinical specimens
- Acute and convalescent samples for serum
specimens - 90 of specimens tested within 9 days
- National laboratory conducts PCR for severe cases
- Confirmatory tests within 24-48 hours
- Detailed characterization performed at WHO
reference laboratory - Number of influenza A specimens shared with WHO
unknown
17Current Surveillance Reports
- Routine reports monthly
- Based on total counts of patients discharged with
pneumonia, ARI, or clinician-defined influenza - Data presented by
- Age
- Gender
- 1 diagnosed with laboratory confirmed influenza
- 3-4 of specimens tested at National Laboratory
are influenza positive, annually
18Current Data Collection on Pneumonia Cases
- Standard patient-level data form for any patient
tested for influenza - Consistent and accurate data entry
- Case demographics
- Date of admission
- Date of data entry
- Limited completeness / updating of fields
- Specimen collection
- Date of illness onset
- Fever
- Final laboratory results
19Your Data Collection
- All 21 provincial hospitals submit P I data
- 4 of 6 you visited report data monthly
- Criteria for pneumonia discharge are unclear
- National laboratory confirms influenza A, B, and
subtypes - Involvement with WHO FluNet unclear
- Data do not suggest seasonality
- Two hospitals account for 70 of pneumonia cases
- Feedback to physicians occurs rarely, if ever
20Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Before we answer
21Remember.
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Objectives of virologic surveillance
- Describe the epidemiology and burden of disease
of influenza, and - Provide virologic isolates for vaccine development
22Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Answer
- Not many metrics have been defined
- Lag of up to 9 days for testing refrigerated
specimens is long - May affect influenza confirmation rate
23Question 3
- What might be appropriate indicators for
timeliness? - Data reporting, time from
- From sentinel site to the next administrative
level - From administrative level to the national level
- Time interval between date of onset of fever and
specimen collection - Specimen testing, time from
- Collection to laboratory
- Receipt of specimen to test result
- Laboratory result to informing referring
institution and physician
24Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Acceptability
- Answer
- Lack of feedback to physicians limits
acceptability to physicians
25Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Acceptability
- Representativeness
- Answer
- Large of cases from only 2 hospitals
- Many hospitals not reporting regularly
- Need more information to determine
representativeness of population
26Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Acceptability
- Representativeness
- Completeness
- Answer
- Some sites over-represented compared to others
- Laboratory data variable
- Need to re-train clinicians and data-entry staff
27Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Acceptability
- Representativeness
- Data Validity / Data Quality
- Answer
- No case definition limits ability to
- Determine baseline
- Interpret trends
- Estimate rates of illness
- Assess risk factors
- Incomplete reporting by most facilities
- Long refrigeration affects specimen quality
28Question 3
- Does this system achieve the objectives for
seasonal/human influenza surveillance that were
discussed earlier? Why or why not? - Consider
- Timeliness
- Acceptability
- Representativeness
- Data Validity /
- Data Quality
- Flexibility
- Answer
- With appropriate laboratory facilities, the
system may be flexible enough to identify
respiratory pathogens in circulation - With case definitions, the system could be
expanded to capture a wider range of diseases
29 Your Recommendations
- Develop a standard case definition for severe
acute respiratory illness - Formally identify sentinel sites
- Training for sentinel site clinicians
- Routinely send influenza isolates to WHO
collaborating centers, and enter into WHO/Flu-Net - Implement a plan for regular feedback of
surveillance information to clinicians - Immediate notification and response for high
priority cases and clusters
30Your Recommendations
- Performance indicators for objective monitoring
and evaluation - Increase laboratory PCR testing
- Additional laboratory quality control
31Your Next Task
- Work with MOH of Pegu
- Write a formal set of national guidelines
- Outline the approach to establish sentinel
surveillance - Standard case definition of SARI among
hospitalized inpatients - Standard case definition if ILI among outpatients
32Question 4
- What criteria will you use to decide where
sentinel hospitals should be located? - Answer
- Representative of a defined population
- Reasonable logistics within the hospital for
- Case identification
- Specimen collection
- Specimen transportation
- Politically acceptable
- Practically Feasible
- Added benefit Location in high risk location
Number of facilities selected will be based on
local resources Each facility should have a
focal point to oversee collection and reporting
of data and specimens
33CDC/WHO SARI Case Definitionfor persons gt 5
years old
- Lower respiratory tract illness consisting of ALL
of the following - Sudden onset of fever over 38C, AND
- Cough or sore throat, AND
- Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, AND
- Requiring hospital admission
34CDC/WHO Case Definitionfor persons lt 5 years old
- Any child 2 months to 5 years of age with cough
or difficult breathing and - breathing faster than 50 breaths / minute (2 12
months) - breathing faster than 40 breaths / minute ( 1 5
years) - or,
- Â Any child 2 months to 5 years of age with cough
or difficulty breathing and any of the following
general danger signs - Unable to drink or breastfeed
- Vomits everything
- Convulsions
- Lethargic or unconscious
- Chest indrawing or stridor in a calm child
- AND Requiring hospitalization
35Question 5
- Which of the following are reasons why good SARI
case definitions are a key data collection
priority in Pegu? - The use of a SARI case definition provides some
standardization of reporting across hospitals and
regions. - Testing defined SARI cases will yield circulating
pathogens and strains - Surveillance using a good SARI case definition
will yield a better understanding of epidemiology
and burden of respiratory disease - It could detect emergence of a new pathogen
- All of the above
- Answer e.
36Question 6
- True or False
- One drawback of Pegus case definition is that it
is not sensitive enough - Answer
- False. Pegus case definition is sensitive. This
is actually a drawback because the countrys
single national laboratory could become
overwhelmed with cases
37Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected and why? - Consider
- General information
- Answer
- Unique identification number
- Medical record number
- Name (and parents name, if a minor)
- Date of Birth
- Sex
- Address
- Date of onset of symptoms
- Date of collection of epidemiologic data
- Part of an outbreak investigation
- Inpatient or outpatient
38Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected? - Consider
- General information
- Specimen
- Answer
- Throat swab date of collection
- Nasal swab date of collection
- Other specimen (if collected) date of collection
39Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected? - Consider
- General information
- Specimen
- Clinical signs, symptoms
- Answer
- Fever gt38
- Cough
- Sore throat
- SOB/Difficulty breathing
- IMCI danger signs (per WHO protocols)
- Diarrhea
40Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected? - Consider
- General information
- Specimen
- Clinical signs, symptoms
- Risk factor information
- Answer
- Occupation
- Contact with
- Suspected H5N1 cases
- Sick or dead poultry or wild birds
- Severe respiratory illness cases
- Travel
- Eating raw or undercooked poultry products
41Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected? - Consider
- General information
- Specimen
- Clinical signs, symptoms
- Risk factor information
- Pre-existing medical
- Answer
- Liver disease
- Kidney disease
- Immune compromised state
- Neuromuscular dysfunction
- Diabetes
- Heart disease
- Lung disease
- Smoking history
42Question 7
- What kinds of data should be collected from the
SARI cases from which specimens are being
collected? - Consider
- General information
- Specimen
- Clinical signs, symptoms
- Risk factor information
- Pre-existing medical
- Treatment history
- Answer
- Vaccination against influenza within the past
year - Currently taking anti viral medicine
43Question 7 Key Points
- Laboratory-Epidemiology link is critical
- There must be a system in place where the same
unique identifier is place on both sets of data
44Chief Surveillance Officer Response
- Concerned about having too many hospitals report
too many SARI cases, overwhelming the laboratory - Random sampling at hospitals may be complicated
for staff - Instead suggests sampling all SARI cases from a
few hospitals
45Surveillance for Less Severe Influenza
- Chief Surveillance Officer would like to include
less severe, more common, influenza cases in the
system - Can be provided by outpatient surveillance
- WHO criteria for influenza-like illness
- Sudden onset of fever over 38C
- Cough or sore throat
- Absence of other diagnoses
46Question 8
- How could the sentinel site system be expanded to
include some less severe influenza cases? - Answer
- Implement ILI surveillance in outpatient clinics
of SARI sentinel-site hospitals - Weekly counts of ILI outpatient visits testing
positive for influenza - Choose small sample of cases for specimen and
epidemiologic data collection
47SARI and ILI Surveillance
- Outpatient ILI surveillance at 5 SARI sentinel
site hospitals - Systematically select first 2 cases each day for
laboratory and epidemiologic investigation - Sentinel hospitals will provide weekly tally of
total ILI cases at facilities
48Part II Influenza A(H5N1) and Pandemic Early
Warning Surveillance
49Media Reports
- Mass deaths of flocks of chickens, geese,
waterfowl - Southeastern Pegu
- Ministry of Agriculture investigation
- 3 chicken samples weakly positive for Influenza
A (H5N1) - No systematic avian surveillance exists
50Question 9
- Are you confident that a hospitalized human case
of Influenza A(H5N1) would be recognized and
responded to? Why or why not? - Answer No.
- There is no system of 24-hr SARI notification and
prioritization for influenza A (H5N1) testing - Rapid detection is needed Treatment is most
effective if given within 48 hours, but
infectiousness may occur 24 hrs prior to onset
need to quickly identify cases and contacts
51Question 10
- How might surveillance for seasonal influenza
support efforts to recognize an emerging pandemic
or detect human cases of Influenza A (H5N1)? - By counting cases
- By creating a logistical network
- By establishing case definitions and reporting
criteria - By tapping into Pegus health budget
- By enhancing laboratory capacity
- None of the above
- Answer b, d.
52Question 10 Additional Answers
- During a pandemic, data from the routine sentinel
site surveillance system will help describe the - Changing geographic location of the virus
- Trend in cases
- Severity of the pandemic
53Question 10 Key Points
- As routine SARI surveillance is instituted, data
will be more complete and standardized - Sentinel-based surveillance is feasible for most
countries to track a pandemic
54 Your Recommendations
- Clinicians at sentinel hospitals and non
sentinel-site hospitals need to be trained in
influenza A (H5N1) screening criteria - Criteria can elevate index of suspicion about
SARI cases - Surveillance officer agrees that trigger criteria
could help prioritize SARI cases for immediate
laboratory testing
55Question 11
- True or False The proposed epidemiologic
trigger criteria below could be used to
prioritize SARI cases for immediate reporting and
laboratory testing for Influenza A (H5N1) - Travel within last 3 weeks to an area with known
H5N1 circulation - Hospitalized for SARI
- Meets the WHO suspect, probable, or confirmed
H5N1case definition - Close contact with WHO suspect, probable, or
confirmed case - Occupational exposure
- SARI in a previously healthy individual
- Consumption of raw /undercooked poultry or wild
bird products - Handling samples (animal or human) suspected of
containing H5N1 virus in a laboratory or other
setting
Answers  1. False 2. False 3. True 4. True 5.
True 6. False 7. True 8. True
56Chief Surveillance Officer Response
- What if the next pandemic isnt caused by
Influenza A (H5N1), but some other respiratory
pathogen that isnt associated with poultry or
wild bird exposure? - We should learn our lesson from SARS and design
a system that can also detect a respiratory
pathogen that is spreading between humans and
causing severe disease.
57Question 12
- Consider the following series of questions about
epidemiologic trigger criteria that might raise
the index of suspicion about whether a
respiratory pathogen of pandemic potential could
be circulating in the population. - Clusters of 2 or more SARI cases occurring within
7-10 days of each other are suspicious under all
circumstances EXCEPT - If they are in a family
- If they all have a social connection
- If they all ate cooked chicken
- If they all have an occupational connection
- Answer C
58Question 13
- Consider the following series of questions about
potential epidemiologic trigger criteria - SARI in health care workers who care for patients
with ______. - Pneumonia
- Chronic respiratory disease
- Poultry exposure
- Previous hospitalization
- Answer a. Pneumonia
59Question 14
- Consider the following series of questions about
potential epidemiologic trigger criteria - Changes in the _________of SARI cases such as a
shift in the age group affected or changes in
mortality rates - severity
- recommended treatment
- epidemiology
- clinical presentation
- Answer e. epidemiology
60Question 15
- Consider the following series of questions about
potential epidemiologic trigger criteria - Any unexplained death due to SARI in persons
_____________. - aged 5-40
- aged lt 5
- without underlying medical conditions
- in countries with known circulation of possible
pandemic respiratory viruses - Answer a.
61Question 16
- Consider the following series of questions about
potential epidemiologic trigger criteria - An increase in the numbers of cases occurring in
a facility compared to the same season in a
previous year is considered a potential trigger
for raising the index of suspicion about whether
a respiratory pathogen of pandemic potential
could be circulating in the population. - True
- False
- Answer a. True
62Questions 12-16 Key Points
- Surveillance for CLUSTERS of SARI is critical
- Even for an influenza A(H5N1) pandemic, most
cases would not have a poultry link - See Trigger Criteria Summary Handout
63Trigger Criteria Decisions
- National clinician education about trigger
criteria and reporting - At hospitals within the sentinel system
- At hospitals outside the sentinel system
- Cases meeting criteria
- Immediate notification to Provincial Medical
Officer via toll-free phone number - Oropharyngeal and nasopharyngeal swabs
64 Finalize the Guidelines
- Trigger cases can facilitate timely diagnosis of
other respiratory pathogens of pandemic
potential, if negative for influenza - Detailed laboratory testing algorithm is planned
- WHO case definitions used for international
reporting purposes
65Laboratory Samples
- H5-positive poultry specimens
- From southeastern province, Pelu Jaghai
- Sent to WHO reference laboratory
- Province is rural
- Hospital care may not be sought
- Community-level surveillance needed
66Question 17
- How could Influenza A (H5N1) and pandemic early
warning surveillance be expanded beyond the
hospitals in Pegu? Match the method on the left
with its description on the right.
67 Pegu Accomplishments
- MOH will train a team in each province, using
polio surveillance officer as bird flu person - Surveillance foundations in place
- Case definitions
- WHO reporting
- Early warning system plans
- Trigger criteria for laboratory testing and
public health investigation - Gatekeeper training
- Sentinel sites
68The next day
- Pelu Jaghai reports another large poultry die-off
- In farms in backyard populations
- Specimens from Ministry of Agriculture sent to
the National Laboratory - Ministry of Health wants to establish active
human surveillance
69Question 18
- Which of the following are surveillance
enhancements for human disease that could be
recommended for the affected province? - Teach Pegus traditional healing methods to it
regional epidemiologists - Door to door surveillance for ill people and
chickens - Initiate school-wide influenza shots
- SARI surveillance among healthcare workers at
local facilities - Active case finding among the occupationally
exposed - Dismiss rumors of clusters within health care
workers, families or village contacts - Recruit private practices, NGOs, religious
institutions, and schools into the surveillance
system for H5N1 and pandemic trigger criteria - Refresher training on reporting procedures
- Confirm availability of telephone reporting
hotlines
70Question 18 Key Points
- Active surveillance is key in this context
- Make surveillance more active in the hospital and
community settings - Backyard poultry husbandry may not be known to
authorities - Poultry workers and community need to know
importance of seeking treatment - Make healthcare facilities aware of community
education and reporting mechanisms - Village health monitors and leaders can be
important sources of information for outside
investigators
71Later that evening
- You learn of two possible human cases in
neighboring Dava Ghar province - No poultry outbreaks have ever been reported
here! - You are asked to extend your stay and participate
in the outbreak investigation - You travel with the District Epidemiologist and
two local officials to Dava Ghar Province
72Continue to Outbreak Investigation Case Study