Callander Denton, Moreira Clarissa, El-Hayek Carol, Asselin Jason, van Gemert Caroline, Watchirs Smith Lucy, Nguyen Long, Dimech Wayne, Boyle Douglas Ir, Donovan Basil, Stoové Mark, Hellard Margaret, Guy Rebecca
Kirby Institute, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Australia.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2018 Nov 20;7(11):e11028. doi: 10.2196/11028.
New biomedical prevention interventions make the control or elimination of some blood-borne viruses (BBVs) and sexually transmissible infections (STIs) increasingly feasible. In response, the World Health Organization and governments around the world have established elimination targets and associated timelines. To monitor progress toward such targets, enhanced systems of data collection are required. This paper describes the Australian Collaboration for Coordinated Enhanced Sentinel Surveillance (ACCESS).
This study aims to establish a national surveillance network designed to monitor public health outcomes and evaluate the impact of strategies aimed at controlling BBVs and STIs.
ACCESS is a sentinel surveillance system comprising health services (sexual health clinics, general practice clinics, drug and alcohol services, community-led testing services, and hospital outpatient clinics) and pathology laboratories in each of Australia's 8 states and territories. Scoping was undertaken in each jurisdiction to identify sites that provide a significant volume of testing or management of BBVs or STIs or to see populations with particular risks for these infections ("priority populations"). Nationally, we identified 115 health services and 24 pathology laboratories as relevant to BBVs or STIs; purposive sampling was undertaken. As of March 2018, we had recruited 92.0% (104/113) of health services and 71% (17/24) of laboratories among those identified as relevant to ACCESS. ACCESS is based on the regular and automated extraction of deidentified patient data using specialized software called GRHANITE, which creates an anonymous unique identifier from patient details. This identifier allows anonymous linkage between and within participating sites, creating a national cohort to facilitate epidemiological monitoring and the evaluation of clinical and public health interventions.
Between 2009 and 2017, 1,171,658 individual patients attended a health service participating in ACCESS network comprising 7,992,241 consultations. Regarding those with unique BBV and STI-related health needs, ACCESS captured data on 366,441 young heterosexuals, 96,985 gay and bisexual men, and 21,598 people living with HIV.
ACCESS is a unique system with the ability to track efforts to control STIs and BBVs-including through the calculation of powerful epidemiological indicators-by identifying response gaps and facilitating the evaluation of programs and interventions. By anonymously linking patients between and within services and over time, ACCESS has exciting potential as a research and evaluation platform. Establishing a national health surveillance system requires close partnerships across the research, government, community, health, and technology sectors.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/11028.
新的生物医学预防干预措施使控制或消除某些血源性病原体(BBV)和性传播感染(STI)变得越来越可行。作为回应,世界卫生组织和世界各国政府已制定了消除目标及相关时间表。为监测实现这些目标的进展情况,需要加强数据收集系统。本文介绍了澳大利亚协调强化哨点监测协作项目(ACCESS)。
本研究旨在建立一个国家监测网络,以监测公共卫生成果,并评估旨在控制血源性病原体和性传播感染的策略的影响。
ACCESS是一个哨点监测系统,由澳大利亚8个州和领地的卫生服务机构(性健康诊所、全科诊所、药物和酒精服务机构、社区主导的检测服务机构以及医院门诊)和病理实验室组成。在每个司法管辖区进行了范围界定,以确定提供大量血源性病原体或性传播感染检测或管理服务的场所,或查看具有这些感染特定风险的人群(“重点人群”)。在全国范围内,我们确定了115个与血源性病原体或性传播感染相关的卫生服务机构和24个病理实验室;采用了目的抽样法。截至2018年3月,在确定与ACCESS相关的机构中,我们已招募了92.0%(104/113)的卫生服务机构和71%(17/24)的实验室。ACCESS基于使用名为GRHANITE的专门软件定期自动提取去识别化的患者数据,该软件根据患者详细信息创建一个匿名唯一标识符。此标识符允许参与机构之间及内部进行匿名关联,创建一个全国队列,以促进流行病学监测以及临床和公共卫生干预措施的评估。
2009年至2017年期间,1,171,658名个体患者前往参与ACCESS网络的卫生服务机构就诊,共计7,992,241次咨询。对于有独特血源性病原体和性传播感染相关健康需求的人群,ACCESS收集了366,441名年轻异性恋者、96,985名男同性恋者和双性恋者以及21,598名艾滋病毒感染者的数据。
ACCESS是一个独特的系统,能够通过识别应对差距并促进项目和干预措施的评估,来跟踪控制性传播感染和血源性病原体的工作,包括通过计算强有力的流行病学指标。通过在不同时间和服务机构之间及内部对患者进行匿名关联,ACCESS作为一个研究和评估平台具有令人兴奋的潜力。建立国家卫生监测系统需要研究、政府、社区、卫生和技术部门之间密切合作。
国际注册报告识别码(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/11028