Introduction%20to%20Outbreak%20Investigation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Introduction%20to%20Outbreak%20Investigation

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Title: Introduction%20to%20Outbreak%20Investigation


1
Introduction to Outbreak Investigation
  • Epidemiology

2
What is Epidemiology?
  • Epidemiology is the study of the distribution
    and determinants of health-related states or
    events in specified populations, and the
    application of this study to the control of
    health problems. -CDC

3
What is Epidemiology?
  • Science of Public Health that studies
  • Distribution of disease
  • Determinants of health/disease
  • Specific populations
  • Look for patterns of disease
  • Time, place, personal characteristics
  • Interventions
  • Prevention is key

4
What does Epidemiology study?
  • Just about anything
  • Health-related
  • Infectious disease
  • Chronic disease

5
How is Epidemiology Used?
  • Population/community health assessment
  • Personal decision-making
  • Complete clinical picture
  • Evaluate interventions
  • Search for cause
  • Exposure and relationship to disease
  • Outbreak investigation

6
Epidemiologic Information
  • Case definition
  • Person
  • Place
  • Time

7
Case Definition
  • Standard set of criteria
  • Clinical and lab
  • Allows for comparison
  • Sensitive vs. Specific

8
Case Definition
  • Smallpox
  • Clinical Description
  • An illness with acute onset of fever gt101 F
    followed by a rash characterized by vesicles or
    firm pustules in the same stage of development
    without other apparent cause.
  • Laboratory Criteria for Confirmation
  • Isolation of smallpox (variola) virus from a
    clinical specimen, or
  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) identification of
    variola DNA in a clinical specimen, or
  • Negative stain electron microscopy (EM)
    identification of variola virus in a clinical
    specimen (Level D laboratory or approved Level C
    laboratory)

9
Suspected Case of Smallpox
  • A case that meets the clinical case definition
    but is not laboratory confirmed and does not have
    an epidemiological link to a confirmed or
    probable case of smallpox, OR a case that has an
    atypical presentation that is not laboratory
    confirmed but has an epidemiological link to a
    confirmed or probable case of smallpox. Atypical
    presentations of smallpox include a) hemorrhagic
    lesions OR b) flat, velvety lesions not appearing
    as typical vesicles nor progressing to pustules.

10
Probable Case of Smallpox
  • A case that meets the clinical case definition
    that is not laboratory confirmed but has an
    epidemiological link to another confirmed or
    probable case.

11
Confirmed Case of Smallpox
  • A case of smallpox that is laboratory confirmed.

12
Case Definition Gradient
Low Specificity
High Specificity
Suspected
Probable
Confirmed
13
Working Case Definition
  • Smallpox Outbreak
  • - Anyone who meets original case definition
  • - Anyone with fever (gt101 F ) or rash who was
    in a confirmed exposed area during the BT event
    or came in contact with a confirmed or probable
    case should be considered a case.

14
Person
  • Age
  • Sex
  • Race/Ethnicity
  • Socio-Economic Status
  • Behaviors

15
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16
Place
  • Geographic Distribution
  • Natural
  • Clustering vs. uniform
  • Home
  • Work
  • School
  • Hospital room

17
Geographic Distribution of LaCrosse
18
Place in LaCrosse Case Investigation
  • Neighborhood
  • Home visits
  • Mosquito Breeding Sites
  • Tires
  • Pots
  • Standing Water

19
Clustered
Scattered
20
Time
  • Onset of symptoms
  • Incubation Period
  • Infectious Period
  • Seasonality
  • Baseline vs. epidemic
  • Interval
  • Long-term trends
  • Shorter for environmental exposure

21
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22
Measles Outbreak
  • Baseline
  • Normal occurrence
  • Onset
  • Incubation period
  • Infectious period
  • Mode of transmission

23
Time in Outbreak investigation
24
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25
Incidence
  • Number of new events occurring in a defined
    population during a specified period of time
  • Incidence
  • New cases/population at risk/time
  • Used to measure current disease activity
  • Allows comparison between areas with different
    populations

26
Contrasts with Prevalence
  • Prevalence is the number of new and existing
    cases divided by the total population (can be
    during a period of time or at a given point)
  • Prevalence
  • (New cases existing cases)/Total population
  • Can be expressed as a percent
  • Can give a picture of disease burden within a
    population

27
Information for any outbreak
  • Symptom onset date
  • Symptoms present and agent if known
  • Suspected exposure date if known
  • Residence
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Laboratory testing
  • Outbreak Case Definition
  • Organized case information in a line list

28
Exposure
  • Possible Cause of illness
  • Know your agent/disease
  • Clinical picture
  • Pathogenesis
  • Mode of transmission
  • Natural Reservoir
  • Common Vehicle or Vector

29
Chain of Infection
30
Transmission
  • Direct
  • Contact
  • Droplet
  • Portal of Exit
  • Portal of Entry
  • Indirect
  • Airborne
  • Vehicle
  • Vector
  • Mechanical vs. biologic

31
Types of Outbreaks
  • Propagated
  • Indicative of person to person transmission
  • Point-source
  • Indicative of a common exposure to a contaminated
    vehicle or reservoir

32
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34
Analytic Epi Studies
  • Associations between exposure and disease
  • Experimental
  • Observational
  • Cohort
  • Case Control
  • Cross-sectional

35
Cohort Study
  • Objective In a population of individuals
    initially free of disease, determine the risk
    factors associated with development of disease.
  • Select Population
  • Categorize individuals based on presence or
    absence of select risk factors
  • Follow individuals to determine which develop
    disease
  • Good for rare exposures

36
Case-Control Study
  • Objective Compare risk factors in diseased and
    non-diseased individuals to determine possible
    associations.
  • Select population
  • Select cases that meet the disease case
    definition
  • Select non-diseased individuals from the
    population to act as controls
  • Gather previous exposure/risk factor histories
    from both groups
  • Many outbreak investigations use this study
    design
  • Good for rare diseases

37
John Snow and Cholera
  • Broad Street Pump
  • 1854 cholera epidemic in London
  • Looks at cholera deaths
  • Geographical mapping
  • Where do cases live?
  • Where do cases work?
  • Water source

38
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39
Use of Two-By-Two Tables
  • Calculate association between disease and exposure

b
a
d
c
ad/bc Odd Ratio ? Relative Risk
40
Interpreting Measures of Association
  • Odds ratios and risk ratios measure the degree of
    relatedness of an exposure and a health event (an
    outcome)
  • The farther away the OR/RR is from 1, the more we
    would say the exposure and outcome are associated
  • Confidence intervals and p-values help to
    determine if association is due to chance

41
People who ate from menu A were about 20 times
more likely to have diarrhea than those that did
not eat from menu A.
42
More OR interpretation
  • OR odds of exposure among ill
  • odds of exposure among well
  • If OR(RR) gt 1, then the exposure is a risk factor
    for being ill
  • If OR lt 1, then the exposure is protective of
    illness
  • If OR 1, then there is no association between
    exposure and illness
  • OR can NEVER be negative!

43
P-value
  • Used in LOTS of statistical tests
  • A guide to tell us that a result is significant
  • Generally at the 95 level
  • p lt 0.05 Significant at the 95 level there
    is a 95 probability that the result is accurate
    (not by chance)
  • Example OR4, p-value0.01
  • Example OR15, p-value0.36

44
95 Confidence Intervals
  • Used with risk ratios and odds ratios
  • Tell us about both precision and accuracy
  • With an OR or RR we have estimated the magnitude
    of the association 95 confidence intervals
    tell us that we can be 95 sure that the true
    association is somewhere in that interval
  • Example OR 7 95CI (5.2, 8.8)
  • Example OR 7 95CI (0.4, 18.7)

45
Strength of Association
  • Magnitude of Odd Ratio
  • 95 Confidence Interval or P-value
  • Be careful
  • Plausibility
  • Confounding

46
Attack Rate
  • AR of people who became ill x10n
  • of people at risk
  • People at risk could be those at a party, in a
    class, on a cruise ship
  • Usually express AR as a , so n 2

47
Secondary Attack Rate
  • Measure of frequency of new cases among contacts
    of known cases
  • cases among contacts of primary cases SAR
    during the period
  • total of contacts

48
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49
The calculations
  • of children in day care center 70
  • of ill children at day care center 7
  • of contacts (of those 7) at home 25
  • of ill contacts 5
  • AR 7/70 0.1 x 100 10 AR
  • SAR 5/25 0.2 x100 20 SAR

50
Summary
  • Case definition, person, time, place
  • Know disease/agent
  • Recognize Point-Source vs. Propagated
  • Set up analytic epi study
  • Measures of association
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