Nelson Cassidy K, Franklin Lucinda J, Gibney Katherine B
Public Health Medicine (Communicable Disease) | Health Protection Branch Regulation, Health Protection and Emergency Management Division Department of Health and Human Services.
Communicable Disease Epidemiology and Surveillance | Health Protection Branch Regulation, Health Protection and Emergency Management Division Department of Health and Human Services.
Commun Dis Intell (2018). 2019 Aug 15;43. doi: 10.33321/cdi.2019.43.34.
Infectious disease surveillance in Victoria, Australia is based upon a legislated requirement for doctors and laboratories to notify suspected or diagnosed cases of specific conditions to the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The department undertakes regular audits of notification practices in Victoria typically every two years. The objective of this particular audit was to describe notification practices in 2016 and 2017, assess the effect of enhanced surveillance programs (ESPs) on Indigenous status data completeness and provide a baseline assessment that can be used to monitor the impact of a recent legislative change to notification requirements for several of the notifiable diseases which came into effect on 1 September 2018.
Notified cases reported to DHHS between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2017 which met the confirmed and probable national case definitions were analysed by year, notifier type (doctor-only, laboratory-only, or both) and condition category (urgent versus routine). For three notifiable conditions (gonococcal infection and hepatitis B and hepatitis C of unspecified duration) Indigenous status completeness was compared pre- and post ESP commencement.
The number of notified cases in Victoria increased 50% from 76,904 in 2016 to 115,318 in 2017 with a 277% increase in notified influenza alone. Almost half of cases were notified by both laboratory and doctor. Indigenous status was more likely to be complete following the introduction of ESPs (relative risk, RR 1.36 (95%CI: 1.33 - 1.40) >0 .001).
DHHS Victoria experienced a 1.5-fold increase in notified cases in 2017 compared with 2016, which was almost entirely attributable to influenza. For three notifiable conditions which had ESPs introduced during this period, Indigenous status reporting significantly improved. Indigenous identifiers on pathology request forms and data linkage are both interventions which are being considered to improve Indigenous status reporting in Victoria.
澳大利亚维多利亚州的传染病监测基于一项法定要求,即医生和实验室需将特定疾病的疑似或确诊病例通知卫生与公众服务部(DHHS)。该部门通常每两年对维多利亚州的通报做法进行一次定期审计。此次专项审计的目的是描述2016年和2017年的通报做法,评估强化监测项目(ESP)对原住民身份数据完整性的影响,并提供一个基线评估,以用于监测2018年9月1日生效的针对几种应通报疾病的通报要求的近期立法变更的影响。
对2016年1月1日至2017年12月31日期间向DHHS报告的符合确诊和疑似国家病例定义的通报病例,按年份、通报者类型(仅医生、仅实验室或两者皆有)和疾病类别(紧急与常规)进行分析。对于三种应通报疾病(未指明病程的淋病感染以及乙型和丙型肝炎),比较了ESP启动前后原住民身份的完整性。
维多利亚州的通报病例数从2016年的76,904例增加了50%,至2017年达到115,318例,仅通报的流感病例就增加了277%。近一半的病例由实验室和医生共同通报。引入ESP后,原住民身份更有可能完整(相对风险,RR 1.36(95%CI:1.33 - 1.40)>0.001)。
与2016年相比,2017年维多利亚州DHHS通报的病例增加了1.5倍,这几乎完全归因于流感。在此期间引入ESP的三种应通报疾病,原住民身份报告有显著改善。病理申请表上的原住民标识符和数据链接都是正在考虑的用于改善维多利亚州原住民身份报告的干预措施。