Department of Infection Control and Preparedness, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Institute of Health and Society, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Infect Dis. 2021 Jul 20;21(1):696. doi: 10.1186/s12879-021-06387-y.
Waterborne outbreaks are still a risk in high-income countries, and their early detection is crucial to limit their societal consequences. Although syndromic surveillance is widely used for the purpose of detecting outbreaks days earlier than traditional surveillance systems, evidence of the effectiveness of such systems is lacking. Thus, our objective was to conduct a systematic review of the effectiveness of syndromic surveillance to detect waterborne outbreaks.
We searched the Cochrane Library, Medline/PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, and Web of Science for relevant published articles using a combination of the keywords 'drinking water', 'surveillance', and 'waterborne disease' for the period of 1990 to 2018. The references lists of the identified articles for full-text record assessment were screened, and searches in Google Scholar using the same key words were conducted. We assessed the risk of bias in the included articles using the ROBINS-I tool and PRECEPT for the cumulative body of evidence.
From the 1959 articles identified, we reviewed 52 articles, of which 18 met the eligibility criteria. Twelve were descriptive/analytical studies, whereas six were simulation studies. There is no clear evidence for syndromic surveillance in terms of the ability to detect waterborne outbreaks (low sensitivity and high specificity). However, one simulation study implied that multiple sources of signals combined with spatial information may increase the timeliness in detecting a waterborne outbreak and reduce false alarms.
This review demonstrates that there is no conclusive evidence on the effectiveness of syndromic surveillance for the detection of waterborne outbreaks, thus suggesting the need to focus on primary prevention measures to reduce the risk of waterborne outbreaks. Future studies should investigate methods for combining health and environmental data with an assessment of needed financial and human resources for implementing such surveillance systems. In addition, a more critical thematic narrative synthesis on the most promising sources of data, and an assessment of the basis for arguments that joint analysis of different data or dimensions of data (e.g. spatial and temporal) might perform better, should be carried out.
PROSPERO: International prospective register of systematic reviews. 2019. CRD42019122332 .
在高收入国家,水源性疫情仍然是一种风险,早期发现对于限制其对社会的影响至关重要。尽管症状监测被广泛用于比传统监测系统更早地检测疫情,但缺乏此类系统有效性的证据。因此,我们的目标是对症状监测系统检测水源性疫情的效果进行系统评价。
我们使用“饮用水”、“监测”和“水源性疾病”等关键词,在 Cochrane Library、Medline/PubMed、EMBASE、Scopus 和 Web of Science 中进行了 1990 年至 2018 年相关文献的组合搜索。对确定的文章进行全文记录评估的参考文献列表进行了筛选,并使用相同的关键词在 Google Scholar 中进行了搜索。我们使用 ROBINS-I 工具和 PRECEPT 对纳入文章的偏倚风险进行了评估,并对累积证据进行了评估。
从 1959 篇文章中,我们回顾了 52 篇文章,其中 18 篇符合纳入标准。12 篇为描述性/分析性研究,6 篇为模拟研究。在检测水源性疫情的能力方面,症状监测并没有明显的证据(低敏感性和高特异性)。然而,一项模拟研究表明,结合空间信息的多个信号源可能会提高检测水源性疫情的及时性,并减少误报。
本综述表明,目前尚无关于症状监测系统检测水源性疫情有效性的明确证据,因此建议应重点关注初级预防措施,以降低水源性疫情的风险。未来的研究应调查将健康和环境数据结合起来的方法,并评估实施此类监测系统所需的财务和人力资源。此外,应进行更具批判性的主题叙述性综合,以评估最有希望的数据来源,并评估联合分析不同数据或数据维度(例如空间和时间)可能会更好的依据。
PROSPERO:国际前瞻性系统评价注册库。2019 年。CRD42019122332。