Lazarus Ross, Kleinman Ken, Dashevsky Inna, Adams Courtney, Kludt Patricia, DeMaria Alfred, Platt Richard
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Emerg Infect Dis. 2002 Aug;8(8):753-60. doi: 10.3201/eid0808.020239.
The advent of domestic bioterrorism has emphasized the need for enhanced detection of clusters of acute illness. We describe a monitoring system operational in eastern Massachusetts, based on diagnoses obtained from electronic records of ambulatory-care encounters. Within 24 hours, ambulatory and telephone encounters recording patients with diagnoses of interest are identified and merged into major syndrome groups. Counts of new episodes of illness, rates calculated from health insurance records, and estimates of the probability of observing at least this number of new episodes are reported for syndrome surveillance. Census tracts with unusually large counts are identified by comparing observed with expected syndrome frequencies. During 1996-1999, weekly counts of new cases of lower respiratory syndrome were highly correlated with weekly hospital admissions. This system complements emergency room- and hospital-based surveillance by adding the capacity to rapidly identify clusters of illness, including potential bioterrorism events.
国内生物恐怖主义的出现凸显了加强对急性病聚集性病例检测的必要性。我们描述了一个在马萨诸塞州东部运行的监测系统,该系统基于从门诊医疗就诊电子记录中获取的诊断信息。在24小时内,识别出记录有相关诊断患者的门诊和电话就诊信息,并将其合并为主要综合征组。报告疾病新发病例数、根据健康保险记录计算的发病率以及观察到至少这一数量新发病例的概率估计值,用于综合征监测。通过比较观察到的与预期的综合征频率,识别出病例数异常多的普查区。在1996 - 1999年期间,下呼吸道综合征新病例的每周计数与每周住院人数高度相关。该系统通过增加快速识别疾病聚集性病例(包括潜在生物恐怖主义事件)的能力,对基于急诊室和医院的监测起到补充作用。