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Sentinel Health Surveillance System

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Title: Sentinel Health Surveillance System


1
Sentinel Health Surveillance System
  • Kamal Mustafa
  • TO/RBM
  • WHO, Afghanistan

2
Sentinel Health Surveillance System
  • Sentinel Health Surveillance System
  • Is one of the public health surveillance methods
    for systematic collection, analysis,
    interpretation, investigation and control
    response, and dissemination of data regarding a
    health-related event for use in public health
    action to reduce morbidity and mortality and to
    improve health.
  • The aim of this approach is to obtain high
    quality and consistent data from a limited number
    of sites.
  • reliable results can be achieved if appropriate
    indicators are selected, representative
    facilities are chosen and active cooperation of
    the staff and the community is ensured

3
Sentinel Health Surveillance System
  • An optimal sentinel health surveillance
    system will have the following characteristics
  • be representative of geographic areas
  • include facilities from all sectors of the health
    care system that provide the relevant care
  • have information about the population represented
  • have information on the total number of patients
    seen during the surveillance exercise in the
    facility to allow for trend determination.

4
Sentinel Health Surveillance System
  •  Data obtained through sentinel site surveillance
    system can be used to
  • Initiate and guide immediate action for cases of
    public health importance
  • measure the burden of a disease (or other
    health-related event), including the
    identification of populations at high risk
  • monitor trends of a disease including the
    detection of epidemics
  • support the planning, implementation, and
    evaluation of programs to prevent and control
    disease, injury, or harmful exposure
  • evaluate public policy
  • detect changes in the environment, and risk
    factors and health practices among the community
    and the effects of these changes
  • help prioritize the allocation of health
    resources
  • describe the course of disease in the community
  • provide a basis for and inputs to epidemiological
    research.

5
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
(an initiative by WHO, USAID/REACH and MOH)
  • This initiative aims for developing a sentinel
    surveillance system that focuses on a small
    number of diseases and conditions of major public
    health importance in Afghanistan that require
    urgent action for disease control, and that
    complements the work of current Health Management
    Information System.
  • It was initiated in June 2004 by discussions
    between WHO, USAID/REACH and MOH on the lack of
    rapid epidemiological information about major
    diseases in Afghanistan, the need for proper
    national diseases surveillance and quick response
    systems as a function of Public Health, and the
    importance of collaborative efforts in developing
    these systems

6
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • Goal
  • The overall goal of this initiative is to
    develop a functional national sentinel health
    surveillance and response system in Afghanistan
    focusing on a set of diseases of public health
    importance to produce actionable data in a timely
    manner

7
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • Specific Objectives 
  • To develop a surveillance system that is simple,
    feasible, affordable and sustainable
  • To develop a system that complements current HMIS
    systems by producing data from a wider variety of
    sources and linking it with rapid response health
    teams for intervention
  • To make use of facilities and resources which are
    already functional and reliable, such as the, the
    WHO polio/EPI surveillance network.

8
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • To measure the burden of a limited number of
    diseases of high public health importance in a
    rapid and continuous manner.
  • To have a training and capacity-building
    component for field epidemiologists through
    regular training and mentoring at the provincial
    level.
  • Improve data quality at the local level through
    rigorous application of epidemiological methods
    and simple tools such as the weekly watch
    chart.

9
Sentinel Surveillance Approach Afghanistan
Malaria endemic provinces
Provinces to pilot integrated sentinel
surveillance
Sentinel sites established to monitor AM drug
resistance
10
Sentinel Surveillance Approach in Afghanistan
  • Conceptual Framework 
  • Guiding Principles of the Proposed Sentinel
    Surveillance System
  •  
  • Establish baseline prevalence
  • Detect outbreaks and epidemics
  • Develop rapid response to epidemics/outbreaks
  • Monitor changes of disease over time
  • Focus resources to solve problems
  • System uses syndromic approach as appropriate

11
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • B. Proposed Priority Diseases to be initially
    addressed by the (Sentinel) Health Surveillance
    System 
  • TB
  • Malaria
  • Severe ARI pneumonia under 5
  • Severe diarrhea/diarrhea with dehydration
  • Maternal deaths (pending review of feasibility
    for study)
  • (These diseases are listed initially because
    they emerged as the top 5 priorities in the
    Provincial Planning Process recently completed in
    15 provinces.)

12
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • C. Strategies  
  • Use of whole, or sub-sample of, WHO Polio
    surveillance Focal Points at district level. WHO
    currently has a system encompassing 458 sentinel
    sites and up to 4,000 community based reporting
    points throughout Afghanistan primarily set up to
    monitor polio and measles cases
  • Expanding Focal Points responsibility to include
    extended list of diseases for surveillance (
    such as TB and malaria)
  • Define syndromes more precisely and develop
    workable case and outbreak definitions    
  • Define surveillance roles and responsibilities of
    staff at each level of the system
  • Develop procedures for notification,
    investigation and control action for each disease
    or condition (cases and outbreaks)
  • Encourage active and rigorous use of the WHO
    weekly watch chart as a method of improving
    data collection and use at the local level
  • Encourage focal points to visit sites for
    confirmation of cases, also to make more
    efficient use of regular visitations of focal
    points to sites
  • Training and costs
  • o       At present 15/mo fixed incentive for
    data reporting, plus 15 per polio case
    investigation and follow up. Establishment of
    one S. Site to monitor AM drug efficacy costs
    5,000
  • o       Support for equipment, materials and
    forms
  • o       Investigation of potential sources of
    incentives, such as per diems for training
  • A staged implementation of the surveillance
    system in the provinces of Baghlan and Takhar

13
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • Expand involvement to a range of stakeholders and
    interested parties such as
  • o       Technical Deputy Minister of Health
  • o       Directorate of Planning, MOH
  • o       Directorate of HMIS, MOH
  • o       UNICEF
  • o       CCM/Global Fund
  • o       CDC Atlanta
  • o       PHC providers at the provincial level
  • A stakeholder analysis and definition of
    responsibilities be carried out to include those
    who provide data for the system and those who use
    the information generated by the system, such as
    health-care providers, provincial health
    officials government officials at local and
    central levels community residents
    nongovernmental organizations and donor
    organizations. All involved stake holders must be
    consulted and given an opportunity to provide
    feedback in order to establish a system
    acceptable to all. 
  • Particular attention should be paid to the
    particular geographical, environmental, political
    and economic conditions present in Afghanistan
    when establishing the surveillance system.

14
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • D. Operational framework
  • When establishing a surveillance system, all
    aspects of the system and its procedures should
    be described in detail to allow stakeholders to
    review and validate the description of the system
    and for other involved parties to understand the
    complexity and resources needed to operate such a
    system. Duplication and repetition of existing
    gathering strategies data and systems should be
    avoided. The description of the surveillance
    process should address
  • 1) system wide characteristics , including data
    and transmission standards to facilitate
    interoperability and data sharing between
    information systems, security, privacy, and
    confidentiality
  • 2) data sources used broadly in this framework to
    include the data-producing facility (such as, the
    reporting point), the data type (e.g., chief
    complaint, survey form, diagnosis, laboratory
    test ), and the data format (e.g., electronic or
    paper, text descriptions of events or illnesses,
    or structured data stored in standardized
    formats)
  • 3) data processing before analysis (the data
    collation, filtering, transformation, and routing
    functions required for public health to use the
    data)
  • 4) statistical analysis (tools for automated
    screening of data for potential outbreaks)
  • 5) epidemiologic analysis, interpretation, and
    investigation (the rules, procedures, and tools
    that support decision-making in response to a
    system signal, including adequate staffing with
    trained epidemiologists who can review, explore,
    and interpret the data in a timely manner).
  • 6) type of outbreak response
  • 7) Provincial level procedures design a
    process by which the provincial surveillance team
    is established and participates in applying the
    case definitions and recommended notification,
    investigation and control procedures to the
    specific condition of the provinces with clear
    definition of local responsibilities.

15
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • E. System costs
  • Cost is a vital factor in assessing the relative
    value of surveillance in a given context. Costs
    can be broken down into
  • 1) Direct costs, include the fees paid for
    software and data, the personnel salary and
    support expenses (e.g., training, equipment
    support, and travel), and other resources needed
    to operate the system and produce information for
    public health decisions (e.g. office supplies,
    Internet and telephone lines, and other
    communication equipment).
  • 2) Variable costs include the cost of follow-up
    activities (e.g., for diagnosis, case-management,
    or community interventions).

16
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • F. Evaluation and Analysis
  • Effective program evaluation is a systematic way
    to improve and account for public health actions
    by involving procedures that are useful,
    feasible, ethical, and accurate. Regular
    evaluation and monitoring specially is an
    essential component of a surveillance system and
    establishes the usefulness of surveillance
    systems for outbreak detection or the best ways
    to support this function.

17
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • Issues and Next steps
  •  
  • Review of mechanisms of information flow and data
    reporting
  • Drafting of Action Plans, including
  • Implementation of sentinel surveillance systems
    in Afghanistan
  • Response to outbreaks
  • Estimations of budget costs and resources needed
  • Specific definitions of indicators and cases
  • Further investigation and analysis of gaps in
    current systems, suggested methods for
    improvement, including site visits at focal
    points and National Reference Labs in Pakistan.

18
Sentinel Health Surveillance System Afghanistan
  • Malaria inputs for the new approach
  • National treatment guidelines and case
    definitions
  • National EPR plan and trained EPR focal points
  • Sentinel site with trained staff to monitor drug
    resistance in Takhar Province
  • National ITNs strategy and trained ITNs
    implementers
  • National social mobilization strategy (COMBI) and
    trained facilitators
  • Standardized training materials in local
    languages
  • National and sub-national ME focal points

19
THANK YOU
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