Typical health surveillance |
Reportable diseases |
Specificity of diagnoses; limited to diseases of interest |
Relies on passive reporting; limited to specific diseases—may not detect new emerging infections; not timely |
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Laboratory-based surveillance |
Specificity of diagnoses |
Often relies on passive reporting; may be limited to specific diseases; not timely |
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Specific disease surveillance (e.g., influenza) |
Follow trends for specific diseases |
Limited to the disease in question; not timely |
Existing health data not normally used for surveillance |
Diagnostic information for inpatients and outpatients |
Reflects incidence of disease in general population |
Nonspecific—may be difficult to document definitive information; may not be accurate |
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Intensive care unit admissions |
Best indicator of rare events (e.g., West Nile virus) |
Will not capture milder cases |
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Prescription and over-the-counter pharmacy sales |
Reflects symptomatology most broadly |
Subject to promotions/sales; nonspecific |
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Clinical laboratory submissions |
Ordered by clinicians; reflects illness patterns |
May not be ordered for all (or most) patients |
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Medicare or Medicaid claims |
Ease of data capture |
Problems with timeliness and accuracy; not broadly representative |
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Acute diagnoses in nursing home populations |
Reported by medical personnel; immobile population with limited exposure possibilities |
Immobility reduces exposure potential; not broadly representative; may not be automated |
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Ambulance call chief complaints |
Many communities with timely access to data |
Nonspecific |
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Radiology test ordering and results |
Ordered by clinicians; may reflect working diagnosis |
Not ordered for all (or most) patients; multiple reasons for radiological tests |
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Poison information calls |
Timeliness |
May not be related to infectious diseases |
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Medical advice call-in |
Occurs very early in disease outbreak |
May be difficult to categorize |
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Emergency room use |
Ease of calculation |
Does not reflect accurate cause of increased patient visits |
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Internet hits for medical information |
Large database with relatively easy access to information |
May be difficult to determine geographic location |
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Medical examiner/mortality surveillance |
May capture severe diseases |
Not timely |
Non–health data sources |
Road and transit usage |
Captures many segments of the population |
Changes may be difficult to interpret |
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Entertainment venue usage |
May reflect behavior early in illness |
May be difficult to collect data; may not reflect expected behavior patterns of ill people |
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Weather data |
Usually readily available |
May not be associated with illness patterns |
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Vector data |
Allows knowledge of potential for spread of vector-borne diseases |
May not be associated with illness patterns |
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School and work absenteeism |
May occur earlier than visits to clinician |
May be absent for nonmedical reasons; data often not automated |